Abstract

Do new communication technologies, such as social media, reduce collective action problem? This paper provides evidence that penetration of VK, the dominant Russian online social network, affected protest activity during a wave of protests in Russia in 2011. As a source of exogenous variation in network penetration, we use information on the city of origin of the students who studied together with the founder of VK, controlling for the city of origin of the students who studied at the same university several years earlier or later. We find that a 10% increase in VK penetration increased the probability of a protest by 4.6%, and the number of protesters by 19%. Additional results suggest that social media has affected protest activity by reducing the costs of coordination, rather than by spreading information critical of the government. In particular, VK penetration increased pro-governmental support and reduced the number of people who were ready to participate in protests right before the protests took place. Also, cities with higher fractionalization of network users between VK and Facebook experienced fewer protests. Finally, we provide suggestive evidence that municipalities with higher VK penetration received smaller transfers from the central government after the occurrence of protests.

Highlights

  • New Economic School, Department of Economics and Business, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona Institute of Political Economy and Governance, Barcelona Graduate School of Economics, and ICREA

  • We provide an extension of the theoretical framework that yields an additional prediction: the extent to which the effect of social media depends on city size is different for these two channels

  • The effect of social media on protest participation via information may exhibit diminishing returns, we would not expect it to increase in magnitude with city size, since there is little reason to believe that the ex ante public signal regarding popularity of the federal regime is noisier in larger cities

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Summary

MARIA PETROVA

The effect of social media on protest participation via information may exhibit diminishing returns, we would not expect it to increase in magnitude with city size, since there is little reason to believe that the ex ante public signal regarding popularity of the federal regime is noisier in larger cities.

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