Title: Replication Data for: Able and Mostly Willing: An Empirical Anatomy of Information's Effect on Voter-Driven Accountability in Senegal
Type Dataset Bhandari, Abhit, Larreguy, Horacio, Marshall, John (2020): Replication Data for: Able and Mostly Willing: An Empirical Anatomy of Information's Effect on Voter-Driven Accountability in Senegal. Harvard Dataverse. Dataset. https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataset.xhtml?persistentId=doi:10.7910/DVN/QAJQXP
Links
- Item record in Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab Dataverse
- Digital object URL
Summary
Political accountability may be constrained by the reach and relevance of information campaigns in developing democracies and---upon receiving information---voters' ability and will to hold politicians accountable. To illuminate voter-level constraints and information relevance absent dissemination constraints, we conducted a field experiment around Senegal's 2017 parliamentary elections to examine the core theoretical steps linking receiving different types of incumbent performance information to electoral and non-electoral accountability. Voters immediately processed information as Bayesians, found temporally benchmarked local performance outcomes particularly informative, and updated their beliefs for at least a month. Learning that incumbents generally performed better than expected, voters durably requested greater politician contact after elections while incumbent vote choice increased among likely-voters and voters prioritizing local projects when appraising incumbents. In contrast, information about incumbent duties did not systematically influence beliefs or accountability. These findings suggest voters were able and mostly willing to use relevant information to hold politicians to account.
More information
- DOI: 10.7910/DVN/QAJQXP
Subjects
- Social Sciences, Benchmarking, Field experiments, Information, Political accountability, Voting behavior
Dates
- Publication date: 2020
- Submitted: June 23, 2020
- Updated: November 17, 2020
Notes
Other: This dataset underwent an independent verification process that replicated the tables and figures in the primary article. For the supplementary materials, verification was performed solely for the successful execution of code. The verification process was carried out by the Odum Institute for Research in Social Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The associated article has been awarded Open Materials Badge. Learn more about the Open Practice Badges from the Center for Open Science.Rights
- info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Format
electronic resource