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Mobile
activism in African elections - A comparative case study
Rebekah Heacok, DigiActive
March 15, 2009
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The proliferation
of mobile phones in Africa is transforming the political and social
landscape of the developing world, empowering people to source and
share their own information and to have a greater say in what comes
to international attention. This R@D product compare the use and
impact of mobile technology in three recent African elections: Nigeria,
Sierra Leone and Kenya. In Nigeria's April 2007 presidential
election, a local civil society organization used free software
to collect over 10,000 text message reports from voters around the
country, boosting citizen participation in a political process many
Nigerians doubted. In Sierra Leone's August-September 2007
elections, trained local monitors used mobile phones to collect
data from designated polling sites, enabling the independent National
Election Watch to compile and release an accurate, comprehensive
analysis of the election almost two weeks before the official report.
And in Kenya's December 2007 election, a group of local digital
activists developed and implemented a citizen reporting platform
to allow Kenyans to report and track post-election violence during
a month-long media blackout, collecting and publishing a comprehensive
account of riots, displacement and human rights abuses that serves
as one of the best available records of the crisis.
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