کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
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5050575 | 1371093 | 2011 | 15 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

This paper examines how motivation, crowding and social image affect environmental conservation decisions. An artefactual field experiment conducted in Bolivia is used to reproduce the trade-off between individual and social benefits in natural resource use and test the effect of non-monetary and non-regulatory incentives on pro-social behavior for environmental conservation. The results show the presence of a social norm prescribing positive contribution towards environmental protection, and that external incentives have heterogeneous effects on pro-social behavior depending on how they influence reputation and self-image. The experimental results differ from those of analogous experiments conducted in the laboratory, and are instead consistent with those from field experiments on common-pool resource management. This fact suggests caution in generalizing conclusions, reached in the laboratory, to different settings and populations.
⺠Do motivation crowding and social image affect environmental conservation choices? ⺠I test the effect of non-monetary and non-regulatory incentives for reforestation. ⺠Their effect is heterogeneous in their influence on reputation and self-image. ⺠They crowd-in (out) giving by individualistic (civically-engaged) subjects. ⺠They give more if observed by people with whom they interact in the public sphere.
Journal: Ecological Economics - Volume 70, Issue 11, 15 September 2011, Pages 2083-2097