Safeguarding Common-Pool Resources in Transition Economies: Experimental Evidence from Central Asia

Empirical evidence suggests that the propensity to cooperate in common pool resource dilemmas is higher for small, homogeneous groups with efficacious monitoring and sanctioning mechanisms. Given that transition from socialist to market economies is associated with larger, more heterogeneous groups...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of development studies 2012-11, Vol.48 (11), p.1683-1697
Hauptverfasser: Rosenbaum, Stephen Mark, Billinger, Stephan, Stieglitz, Nils
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creator Rosenbaum, Stephen Mark
Billinger, Stephan
Stieglitz, Nils
description Empirical evidence suggests that the propensity to cooperate in common pool resource dilemmas is higher for small, homogeneous groups with efficacious monitoring and sanctioning mechanisms. Given that transition from socialist to market economies is associated with larger, more heterogeneous groups with diluted opportunities for monitoring and sanctioning, individuals in later-stage transition economies may be expected to be less cooperative than their early-stage counterparts. However, evidence from experiments conducted with subjects in two economies at different stages of transition suggests that this may not be the case. These findings have implications for both theorists and practitioners alike.
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subjects Central Asia
Co-operative sector
Common Lands
Economic sanctions
Economic theory
Heterogeneity
Homogeneity
Market economies
Market Economy
Sanctions
Socialism
Socialist economies
Transition economies
title Safeguarding Common-Pool Resources in Transition Economies: Experimental Evidence from Central Asia
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