WhatsApp and political communication in West Africa: Accounting for differences in parties’ organization and message discipline online

Author:

Fisher Jonathan1ORCID,Gadjanova Elena2,Hitchen Jamie3

Affiliation:

1. University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK; University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa

2. University of Exeter, Exeter, UK

3. University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

Abstract

Social media has become central to how political parties plan, organize, and coordinate electoral campaigns in Africa, with WhatsApp increasingly the preferred medium. How, we ask, have African political parties made use of WhatsApp to organize internally during elections, and what explains the approaches they have taken? We argue that pre-existing party institutionalization is the main factor influencing how parties use WhatsApp to organize and coordinate campaign events, and reach voters. Comparing Ghana and Nigeria, we show that more institutionalized parties create formal, hierarchical online structures, with in-group policing of message content. Conversely, less institutionalized parties rely on informal, personality-based online structures with unclear hierarchies and where there is little message discipline. This matters both for the spread of mis/disinformation and inflammatory content online, and for parties’ future organizational strength. In both instances, “digital clientelism” ensures that existing patrimonial structures are replicated online, restricting the empowerment of new political actors.

Funder

Global Challenges Research Fund

WhatsApp

University of Exeter

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference46 articles.

1. Capital and Opposition in Africa: Coalition Building in Multiethnic Societies

2. B&FT Online (2020) Bawumia launches “adopt a polling station” campaign. 27 October. Available at: https://thebftonline.com/2020/10/27/bawumia-launches-adopt-a-polling-station-campaign/ (accessed 23 April 2023).

3. Measuring Party Institutionalization in Developing Countries: A New Research Instrument Applied to 28 African Political Parties

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