DISSERTATION

Protests, concession and repression in a networked society

29/04/2016

Pedro Bessone Tepedino

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Advisor: Vinicius Nascimento Carrasco

Examiners: Leonardo Rezende, Thierry Verdier, Bernardo Vasconcellos Guimarães.

We develop a sequential game between groups of individuals taking part in a mass protest and a democratic government facing electoral constraints. The groups are connected by a network of participation externalities, as participation from individuals generate arbitrary heterogeneous externalities in members of other groups. This setting allows us to study a myriad of unexplored phenomena like how the presence of strong leaderships or radical groups affect protests' pattern of participation and the likelihood of repression. Our results explain in particular how the recent communication revolution affected protests' outcomes. In a nutshell, our results indicate that horizontal protests are more likely repressed and unpopular radical groups diminished the likelihood of ousting the incumbent from office, implying that the government will use any means at its disposal in order to consolidate radical groups.

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