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Events - Page 4

Time and place: , Gullhaug Torg 1 & Zoom

Title of the presentation: "How Jurisdiction Size Affects the Politics of Land Use"

Time and place: , Gullhaug Torg 1 & Zoom

Title of the presentation: "Strategic roll call vote requests". Co-authored with Fang-Yi Chiou & Simon Hug

Time and place: , Gullhaug Torg 1 & Zoom

Title of the presentation: "Fighting the Disease or Manipulating the Data? Democracy, State Capacity, and the COVID-19 Pandemic"

 

Time and place: , Zoom

Title of the presentation: "License to Educate: The Role of National Networks in Colonial Empires"

Time and place: , Zoom

Title of the presentation: "Colonial Education, Political Elites, and Regional Political Inequality in Africa"

Time and place: , Gullhaug Torg 1 & Zoom

Title of the presentation: "Privileging one's own? Voting patterns and politicized spending in India"

Time and place: , Zoom

Title of the presentation "Great Power Competition and the Domestic Politics of 'Swing' States: Southern Asia since 1945"

 

Time and place: , Gullhaug Torg 1

Title of the presentation "The Politics of COVID-19 Containment: The Curious Case of Tanzania"


 

Time and place: , Zoom

Title of the presentation "Vox Populi. Public Support for the Popular Initiative"

 

Time and place: , Zoom

Title of the presentation "International Sports Events, Media Attention, and Repression: Evidence from the 1978 FIFA World Cup"

Abstract

How do international sports events shape repression in authoritarian host countries? International tournaments promise unique gains in political prestige through global media attention. However, autocrats must fear that foreign journalists will unmask their wrongdoings. We argue that autocracies solve this dilemma by strategically adjusting repression according to the spatial-temporal presence of international media. Using original, highly disaggregated data on the 1978 World Cup, we demonstrate that the Argentine host government largely refrained from repression during the tournament, but preemptively cleansed the streets beforehand. These adjustments specifically occurred around hotels reserved for foreign journalists. Additional tests demonstrate that: 1) before the tournament, repression turned increasingly covert, 2) during the tournament, targeting patterns mirrored the working shifts of foreign journalists, 3) after the tournament, regime violence again spiked in locations where international media had been present. Together, the paper highlights the human costs of mega-events, contradicting the common whitewashing rhetoric of functionaries