2014
DOI: 10.1093/qje/qju020
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Propaganda and Conflict: Evidence from the Rwandan Genocide *

Abstract: This article investigates the role of mass media in times of conflict and state-sponsored mass violence against civilians. We use a unique village-level data set from the Rwandan genocide to estimate the impact of a popular radio station that encouraged violence against the Tutsi minority population. The results show that the broadcasts had a significant effect on participation in killings by both militia groups and ordinary civilians. An estimated 51,000 perpetrators, or approximately 10% of the overall viole… Show more

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Cited by 485 publications
(179 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
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“…On the other hand, little explicit attention has been given to the role of technology in facilitating violence. While some recent studies analyze the potential effects of mass media, like television and radio broadcasting (Warren 2013;Yanagizawa-Drott 2012), hardly any empirical research deals with individual-to-individual communication. 3 We argue that private, mobile long-distance communication addresses crucial free-rider and coordination problems endemic to insurgent activity.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the other hand, little explicit attention has been given to the role of technology in facilitating violence. While some recent studies analyze the potential effects of mass media, like television and radio broadcasting (Warren 2013;Yanagizawa-Drott 2012), hardly any empirical research deals with individual-to-individual communication. 3 We argue that private, mobile long-distance communication addresses crucial free-rider and coordination problems endemic to insurgent activity.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the one hand, the population can bene…t massively from the provision of cultural be. Yanagizawa (2009) estimates that 9% of the killings can be explained by the infamous hate radio station Radio RTLM which increased violence by 65 to77% in villages with complete radio coverage. 24 In our reading the real issue is not that stories of violence and cruelty are made up.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dell (2015) examines violence between the Mexican government and drug cartels and finds that crackdowns by the right-wing PAN party account for at least half of the recent increases in Mexican homicides, offering a potential rebuke of hardline political approaches to domestic conflict. Yanagizawa-Drott (2014) show that propaganda can incite Rwandan civilians to violence and can even have spillover effects on those not reached directly. And while they do not explicitly model agent incentives, Card and Dahl (2011) demonstrate empirically that there is an increase in reports of domestic violence immediately following an unexpected loss by home football teams.…”
Section: Empirical Analyses Of the Causes And Consequences Of Conflictmentioning
confidence: 99%