Assistant Professor of Politics, University of Exeter
I study political communication, elections, and ethnic politics with a focus on Sub-Saharan Africa. My work combines extensive fieldwork with statistical methods and survey experiments to examine parties' campaign strategies, targeting decisions, and electoral appeals, and the effects these have on citizens' self-identification, trust in government, and support for democracy.
Much of my research to date has focused on political rhetoric and ethnic appeals, although I have also written on how rising electoral competitiveness transforms clientelism in Africa. My book manuscript examines how politicians reach across ethnic lines in Africa's highly diverse states.
More broadly, I am interested in the challenges and opportunities rising diversity presents to governance, institutions, and democracy worldwide. My work is motivated by a desire to better understand, and ultimately help to overcome, sources of polarization in plural societies.
Read more at https://socialsciences.exeter.ac.uk/politics/staff/gadjanova/#2WmSZ1MgzwWgL5tY.99
Social Media Revolution Series
The hidden costs of social media use in elections: A Ghana case study
Dec 04, 2019 12:17 pm UTC| Insights & Views Politics
Social media is becoming increasingly central to election campaigns around the world. In the process, it is transforming politics in a number of ways. Unsurprisingly, journalists and analysts have focused on the more...
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