Abstract:
Social media is an integral part of modern life with enormous economic, political, and
social implications. Sub-Saharan Africa has received considerable attention regarding
the use of social media during elections. Studies have shown that social media is
increasingly being adopted and used for democratic activities, especially during
elections in most African countries. However, there is a dearth of literature on the use
of social media for democratic purposes during the non-electioneering period.
Therefore, the purpose of the study was to analyse how Tanzanians use X (formerly
Twitter) to foster democracy in the non-election period so as to raise awareness among
social media users, proposing ways of enhancing its usage for democratic development.
The study sought to answer four questions: How do political parties utilise X to
encourage new forms of political communication in Tanzania’s public sphere? How do
Tanzanians use #KaziIendelee and #KatibaMpya to engage in political discourse in the
country? In what ways do Tanzanian activists leverage the various uses of X to
influence socio-political change in the country? In which ways does the Tanzanian
government use X to promote democratic governance? The conceptual frameworks of
democratic listening, online listening, and digital citizenship guided the analysis and
discussion of the findings. The research adopted interpretivism and took a qualitative
approach, using the case study method. Given the dynamic nature of social media
platforms, the population for the study was indefinite. X accounts from three political
parties, two activists, the government spokesman, and two popular political hashtags
were chosen as part of a purposive sample. The data were collected from X using
Twitonomy, which was developed precisely for X research. The data were collected
from X using Twitonomy, which was developed precisely for X research. The data were
analysed descriptively using Twitonomy and thematically using Qualitative Data
Analysis (QDA) Miner Lite. Analysis of the selected accounts and hashtags ascertained
that Tanzanians frequently used X during the non-electioneering period, detailing the
frequency of tweets, the people that users interacted with the most, and the most popular
hashtags. Political parties relied on X as their primary medium for political
communication and activities. Tanzanians used #KaziIendelee and #KatibaMpya to
identify with communities of their liking and engage in political discourse of the course
they support. Activists used X for information sharing, democratic advocacy, and
driving reforms. Tanzanian government used X to encourage public participation by
educating, inspiring, and raising public awareness of national development initiatives.
Despite engaging in internet listening, the government’s communication was primarily
one-sided. The study concludes that social media can be an effective instrument for
bolstering democracy outside election seasons, but its efficacy is contingent upon its
responsible and skilful utilisation. The study recommends inclusion of digital
citizenship in Tanzania’s civic education policy, trainings in content creation for
activism and political social media, and the government to encourage followers’
feedback.