School of Foreign Service
Tuesday, February 26, 2013 from 12:00pm to 1:30pm
Mortara Building Mortara Center Conference Room
Suppressing Protest during Electoral Crises: The Geographic Logic of Mass Arrests in Ethiopia
by Leonardo Arriola, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, UC Berkeley
How do authoritarian governments respond to the threat of opposition
protest after disputed election results? Governments often use coercion
to suppress protests that threaten the political status quo, but it
remains unclear whether they seek to maximize the impact of repression
by imposing sanctions indiscriminately, stoking general terror to induce
acquiescence, or by targeting sanctions against those most likely to
mobilize against the regime in power.
This paper contributes to the
study of electoral authoritarianism by showing how governments use the
urban geography of their capitals to target repression during electoral
crises. The argument is illustrated with evidence from the Ethiopian
government’s response to opposition protests in the national capital
after disputed election results in 2005. Based on an analysis of nearly
15,000 protest-related arrests, the paper shows that the Ethiopian
government pursued a strategy of geographic targeting, preemptively
detaining young men mainly residing near the executive office, in order
to forestall further anti-regime mobilization. Distance from the
executive office alone is shown to explain nearly a third of the
variation in neighborhood arrest rates, while factors such as protest
history, the intensity of protest, the location of opposition leader
arrests, and the location of police stations are found to have no impact
on neighborhood arrest rates.
About the Speaker:
Leonardo Arriola is Assistant Professor for Comparative Politics and
African at the University of California, Berkeley. Professor Arriola
studies electoral politics, ethnic politics, and political violence with
a focus on African countries. His current research examines how
electoral violence affects multiparty competition, power sharing, and
state repression. He has conducted field research in Cameroon, Ethiopia,
Kenya, Madagascar, and Senegal. He has previously been a visiting
scholar at the Kellogg Institute for International Studies at Notre
Dame, a Fulbright scholar at the Institute of Ethiopian Studies at Addis
Ababa University, and a visiting researcher at the West African
Research Center in Dakar, Senegal.
This event is free and open to the public. A Q&A session will follow the lecture.
A light lunch will be served.
Contact africanstudies@georgetown.edu
Sponsors The Mortara Center and the African Studies Program
Web site For more information, see http://arriolalecture.eventbrite.com
Sponsors The Mortara Center and the African Studies Program
Web site For more information, see http://arriolalecture.eventbrite.com
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