Women and Election Activism in Uganda: The Pads4Girls Social Media Campaign
Original version
Selnes, Orgeret K: Women and Election Activism in Uganda: The Pads4Girls Social Media Campaign. In: Ndlela MN, Mano W. Social Media and Elections in Africa, Volume 2, 2020. Palgrave Macmillan p. 31-58 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-32682-1_3Abstract
This chapter draws on experiences from Uganda to interrogate social media’s potential to
facilitate women’s participation in electoral processes. Through taking the Pads4Girls
campaign in the aftermath of the Ugandan 2016 election as a case, the chapter examines how
social media can contribute to political change and electoral democracy. Social media’s
potential in public communication has been demonstrated during elections globally and in
heightened political situations in Uganda. Some of the most vibrant debates in Uganda were
on Facebook and Twitter during the 2011 and 2016 elections and their aftermath. The data
were collected through analysis of Facebook content about the Pads4girls campaign and
interviewing. The chapter builds on debates about media and gender and argues that social
media facilitate conversation on electoral matters but their role depends on the context within
which they are applied. The Pads4Girls campaign ended with the imprisonment of its
architect over cyber harassment.