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ACDE seminar: Leveraging Edutainment and Social Networks to Foster Interethnic Harmony

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Fred Gruen Economics Seminar Room
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Tue, 25 Feb, 2pm - 3:30pm AEDT

Event description

This seminar shares latest data on Australians’ attitudes towards immigration and results from a survey experiment testing what changes them.

Interethnic tensions pose a significant barrier to the socioeconomic advancement of minority groups. This paper investigates the effectiveness of educational entertainment (or edutainment) in promoting interethnic harmony. We carried out a cluster-randomized field experiment involving over 3,300 households across 121 polyethnic villages in Bangladesh. We find that disseminating information through a documentary film designed to educate the ethnically dominant Bengalis about the ethnic minority Santals in polyethnic villages increased the ethnic majority’s prosociality toward minorities. Using emotion-detecting software to analyze facial expressions during the film viewing reveals that empathy played a significant role in this process. On the other hand, we do not find any impact on the prevalence of negative stereotypes and discriminatory opinions toward minorities. In addition, we find that targeting network-central individuals with the intervention generated positive spillovers on others within villages, including Santals. We further corroborate these findings through village-level administrative data showing a reduction in police complaints in treatment villages. Five months after the intervention, we conducted a casual work field experiment involving 720 randomly selected participants from the main intervention. In this casual work task, pairs of ethnic majority and minority participants jointly produced paper bags for a local supplier under a piece-rate compensation scheme. We find treatment effects on productivity for both ethnic groups. For the ethnic majority, exposure to edutainment led to higher productivity, possibly through increased prosociality towards minorities. Among the ethnic minority, reciprocity or peer pressure appears to explain their observed productivity gains. Overall, our findings demonstrate the power of edutainment and social networks in promoting harmony within multiethnic communities.

Speaker: Abu Siddique, Royal Holloway University of London

Note that this ACDE Seminar is joint with the Research School of Economics, and over in the RSE building (H.W. Arndt Bldg 25A). RSE event page: 2025 General Seminar no. 4 - Abu Siddique (Royal Holloway) | Research School of Economics

Link to paper: Edutainment_project_Bangladesh.pdf - Google Drive

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Fred Gruen Economics Seminar Room