Covid-19 Pandemic and Electoral Participation in Africa: Likelihood of Ugandans Voting in the 2021 "Pandemic Elections"

Martin Oswald
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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic wreaked havoc on political dynamics, as it did on other aspects of human life. The outbreak of the pandemic in 2020 almost brought the world to a standstill. This was mainly due to pandemic mitigation measures put in place, including social distancing. These actions greatly affected all levels of human interaction – politically, socially, and economically. Politically, it meant minimal or no electoral activities, no local or international face-to-face meetings, and the abuse of power. The restrictions saw elections postponed indefinitely in some countries, rescheduled or delayed in others, or held with minimal interaction elsewhere. Uganda is one of the few African countries that went ahead with holding elections in 2021 amid the pandemic. The study sought to examine and contribute to the broader understanding of the effects of COVID-19 on electoral participation by analysing available literature, Uganda’s electoral laws and reports, and Afrobarometer survey data collected in Uganda before and during the pandemic. The focus was on individual-level predictors of voting intentions by Ugandans: demographic, political, social, and economic. Descriptive and inferential analyses were performed on citizens’ likelihood of voting. The results demonstrate that party affiliation/identification and ethnic/regional identity are the strongest predictors of the likelihood of voting during the pandemic.
2019冠状病毒病大流行与非洲选举参与:乌干达人在2021年“大流行选举”中投票的可能性
COVID-19大流行对政治动态和人类生活的其他方面造成了严重破坏。2020年大流行的爆发几乎使世界陷入停滞。这主要是由于采取了大流行缓解措施,包括保持社交距离。这些行为极大地影响了人类互动的各个层面——政治、社会和经济。在政治上,这意味着很少或没有选举活动,没有地方或国际面对面会议,以及滥用权力。这些限制导致一些国家的选举无限期推迟,另一些国家的选举重新安排或推迟,或在其他地方进行了最少的互动。乌干达是少数几个在疫情期间如期在2021年举行选举的非洲国家之一。该研究试图通过分析现有文献、乌干达的选举法和报告以及非洲晴雨表在疫情前和疫情期间在乌干达收集的调查数据,研究并促进对COVID-19对选举参与的影响的更广泛理解。重点是在个人层面上预测乌干达人的投票意向:人口、政治、社会和经济。对公民的投票可能性进行了描述性和推理性分析。结果表明,党派/认同和种族/地区认同是大流行期间投票可能性的最强预测因素。
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