Technology and Collective Action Event Size: Lessons for India

DOI10.1177/2321023021999231
AuthorWilliam O’Brochta
Published date01 June 2021
Date01 June 2021
Subject MatterNotes on Methods
Notes on Method
Technology and Collective Action
Event Size: Lessons for India
William O’Brochta1
An event is a geographically and temporally focused ‘nonroutine, collective and public’ action aimed at
making broad social or political claims (Olzak, 1989, p. 124). Event attendance matters for how the
event is perceived and reported on by citizens, the media and political leaders (Biggs, 2018; McPhail &
McCarthy, 2004). Scholars of Indian politics have measured event size with proxies: using deaths, inju-
ries, or the number of First Information Reports (FIRs) filed to quantify riot size and relying on newspa-
per-based estimates of the size of other collective action events (Bhavnani & Lacina, 2015; Varshney &
Wilkinson, 1996). Is there a way to improve our event size estimates in order to more effectively study
this critical indicator of event success and impact?
Political scientists have recently developed methods for detecting event size using data from technol-
ogy-based sources, including geolocation, social media activity and social media photos. In some con-
texts, these methods comport well with existing newspaper-based measures of event size, and their
automated nature reduces cost and eases implementation compared to traditional newspaper searches
(Botta et al., 2015).
In this note, I apply technology-based event size measures to Indian events. I argue that the way that
events develop in India makes using technology-based data to estimate event size particularly difficult.
I take as my case the 2019 and 2020 protests surrounding the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and
related causes in Delhi. These protests were highly publicized, politicized and contested, with public
campaigns waged on social media. Drawing on fieldwork at key protest sites, a review of social media
data and media reports, I find that strategic choices on behalf of both protesters and the government
made estimating event size using technological data quite challenging. I then discuss some ways that
event size measurement techniques can be adapted for the Indian context.
Studies in Indian Politics
9(1) 118–123, 2021
© 2021 Lokniti, Centre for the
Study of Developing Societies
Reprints and permissions:
in.sagepub.com/journals-permissions-india
DOI: 10.1177/2321023021999231
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Note: This section is coordinated by Divya Vaid (divya.vaid.09@gmail.com)
1 Department of Political Science, Washington University in St Louis, Missouri, USA.
Corresponding author:
William O’Brochta, Department of Political Science, Washington University in St Louis, St Louis, Missouri 63130,
USA.
E-mail: obrochtawj@wustl.edu

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