Abstract:
Research on gender-based violence (GBV) has primarily focused on non-political dimensions, while studies
specifically on political gender-based violence (PGBV) tend to be reductionist, often centering on elite women
candidates running for office. This narrow focus overlooks the experiences of rural women, who represent a
vulnerable majority in political spaces and are increasingly affected by political violence including, and
increasingly so, within digital environments. Moreover, the study of PGBV in virtual or digital spaces remains
limited. This study attempted to address this gap by examining the experiences of rural women with gendered
political violence in digital spaces with the aim of offering insights to both academic and policy cycles. Using
a sequential exploratory mixed methods design and inspired by Intersectional Feminist framework (Crenshaw,
1991, improved by Hawk, 2015), this study investigates the influence of gender on rural voters’ experiences of
PGBV across nine identified digital domains. Data were gathered from self-administered surveys in-depth
qualitative interviews and focus groups discussions with rural voters and electoral policymaker and
implementers from 2 sub-counties and 4 Wards from Siaya County. The study explored specific grounds for
political violence, including social media harassment and intimidation, disinformation campaigns and character
assassination, cyberstalking and surveillance, non-consensual sharing of private information (doxing), coercive
use of messaging platforms, exclusion from digital campaign engagement, manipulative use of deepfakes and
altered media, sexual harassment in virtual campaign spaces, and exploitation via mobile money scams.
Findings reveal three key insights with implications for extant literature, policy, and gender mainstreaming
initiatives. First, the relationships between gender and Political violence and digital politics are more nuanced
than currently understood, underscoring the need to acknowledge and transform elitist ontologies in literature,
policy and programming. Second, digital spaces offer challenges that must be addressed to advance
meaningful gender mainstreaming for attainment of gender parity in politics. Finally this study provides a
foundational list of variables, which though are neither conclusive nor comprehensive, can inform future, nonelite-focused analyses of PGBV. Overall, the study findings contribute to a broader understanding of PGBV in
digital spaces, particularly from the perspective of vulnerable rural women (and rural voters generally).
Description:
Article Research Journal on the Invisible Majority: Rural Women, Digital Campaigns, and
Political Violence