Fire Alarms for Police Patrols: Experimental Evidence on Coproduction of Public Safety

Effective public goods provision requires coproduction by both citizens and the government. Search costs that complicate citizens’ ability to share information constitute a critical and understudied impediment to this coproduction. We experimentally evaluate search costs in a rural, conflict-affecte...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of politics 2023-07, Vol.85 (3), p.1017-1032
Hauptverfasser: Nanes, Matthew, Ravanilla, Nico, Haim, Dotan
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container_title The Journal of politics
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creator Nanes, Matthew
Ravanilla, Nico
Haim, Dotan
description Effective public goods provision requires coproduction by both citizens and the government. Search costs that complicate citizens’ ability to share information constitute a critical and understudied impediment to this coproduction. We experimentally evaluate search costs in a rural, conflict-affected province of the Philippines. We randomize the rollout of a police hotline that dramatically reduces the costs of reporting and compare it against both the status quo and an alternative intervention that builds trust but does not affect search costs. The hotline increased the likelihood of reporting crimes by 10–19 percentage points. The intervention reduced perceived insurgent activity but had no perceptible impact on ordinary crime. Our findings suggest that addressing search costs substantially improves service delivery, potentially explaining why policies imported from higher-capacity countries may fail to achieve results in developing contexts.
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source PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Political Science Complete
subjects Alarms
Citizens
Costs
Crime
Fire alarms
Insurgency
Intervention
Offenses
Patrols
Police
Public goods
Public safety
title Fire Alarms for Police Patrols: Experimental Evidence on Coproduction of Public Safety
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