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Public protests and policy making
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Technological advances and the development of social media have made petitions, public protests, and other form of spontaneous activism increasingly common tools for individuals to influence decision makers. To study these phenomena, in this article I present a theory of petitions and public protests that explores their limits as mechanisms to aggregate information. The key assumption is that valuable information is dispersed among citizens. Through petitions and protests, citizens can signal their private information to the policy maker, who can then choose to use it or not. I first show that if citizens’ individual signals are not sufficiently precise, information aggregation is impossible, no matter how large is the population of informed citizens, even if the conflict with the policy maker is small. I then characterize the conditions on conflict and the signal structure that guarantee information aggregation. When these conditions are satisfied, I show that full information aggregation is possible as the population grows to infinity. When they are not satisfied, I show that information aggregation may still be possible if social media are available.
- Subjects :
- Structure (mathematical logic)
Economics and Econometrics
education.field_of_study
business.industry
Policy making
05 social sciences
Population
Policy maker
PETITIONS
Public relations
PUBLIC PROTESTS
Information aggregation
0502 economics and business
Key (cryptography)
Economics
PUBLIC PROTESTS, POLICY MAKING, PETITIONS
Social media
050207 economics
business
education
Private information retrieval
POLICY MAKING
050205 econometrics
Law and economics
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c9f43c6cada25af8796ca664ba9d5c8a