4.6 Article

The effect of peer-to-peer risk information on potential migrants-Evidence from a randomized controlled trial in Senegal

Journal

WORLD DEVELOPMENT
Volume 145, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.worlddev.2021.105488

Keywords

Randomized controlled trial; Migration; Information; Decision-making; Communication for development; Peer-to-peer

Funding

  1. Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands
  2. Department for International Development of the United Kingdom
  3. German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development

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The study shows that peer-to-peer information interventions can increase potential irregular migrants' risk awareness, reduce their intentions to migrate irregularly, and enhance their subjective information levels.
In response to mounting evidence on the dangers of irregular migration from Africa to Europe, the number of information campaigns which aim to raise awareness about the potential risks has rapidly increased. Governments, international organizations and civil society organizations implement a variety of campaigns to counter the spread of misinformation accelerated by smuggling and trafficking networks. The evidence on the effects of such information interventions on potential migrants remains limited and largely anecdotal. More generally, the role of risk perceptions in the decision-making process of potential irregular migrants is rarely explicitly tested, despite the fact that the concept of risk pervades conventional migration models, particularly in the field of economics. We address this gap by assessing the effects of a peer-to-peer information intervention on the perceptions, knowledge and intentions of potential migrants in Dakar, Senegal, using a randomized controlled trial design. The results show that - three months after the intervention - peer-to-peer information events increase potential migrants' subjective information levels, raise risk awareness, and reduce intentions to migrate irregularly. We find no substantial effects on factual migration knowledge. We discuss how the effects may be driven by the trust and identification-enhancing nature of peer-to-peer communication. (c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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