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Improving Cooperation among Farmers for Communal Land Conservation in Ethiopia: A Public Goods Experiment
Author(s) -
Shunji Oniki,
Haftu Etsay,
Melaku Berhe,
Teklay Negash
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
sustainability
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.612
H-Index - 85
ISSN - 2071-1050
DOI - 10.3390/su12219290
Subject(s) - tragedy of the commons , common pool resource , business , public good , communal land , natural resource , commons , social capital , natural resource management , intervention (counseling) , public goods game , developing country , natural resource economics , environmental resource management , psychological intervention , economic growth , economics , geography , land tenure , agriculture , political science , psychology , archaeology , psychiatry , law , microeconomics
Farmers in developing countries depend on communal natural resources, yet countries in Sub-Saharan Africa are facing the severe degradation of communal lands due to the so-called “tragedy of the commons”. For the sustainable management of common resources, policy interventions, such as farmer seminars, are necessary to ensure high-level cooperation among farmers for land conservation. However, the effects of this type of information provision are not well known. The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of the dissemination of conservation information on collaborative communal forest management using an economic field experiment with 936 farmers selected by random sampling from 11 villages in the northern Ethiopian Highlands. We conducted a public goods game experiment using a framework of voluntary contribution to communal land conservation with an intervention to remind participants about the consequence of their behaviors. The results show that the volunteer contribution increased after the intervention, and thereafter the decay of the contribution was slow. The results indicate that providing information about the consequences leads to a higher contribution. The effects of information provision are heterogeneous in terms of social condition, such as access to an urban area and social capital, and individual characteristics, such as wealth. These findings imply that information provision effectively improves farmer collaboration toward natural resource conservation in developing countries.

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