2013
DOI: 10.5751/es-05721-180310
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Rules Compliance and Age: Experimental Evidence with Fishers from the Amazon River

Abstract: ABSTRACT. We report the results of common-pool resource economic experiments conducted with indigenous communities in the Colombian Amazon. The experiments recreate two contexts: a limited open access with no institutions regulating the fisheries and a nonmonetary external regulation that limits individual extraction when a fisher is found to be overextracting. We find that variables that did not explain behavior under limited open access do so under the regulatory institution. In particular, when the nonmonet… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Secondly, it can increase local awareness of threats facing wildlife populations, which is important as research indicates that community perspectives on the condition and stability of nature influences illegal biodiversity exploitation (Gore, Lute, Ratsimbazafy, & Rajaonson, 2016). Furthermore, studies have emphasized the critical role that awareness of rules plays in compliance with environmental regulations (e.g., Hodgetts et al, 2018; Winter & May, 2001), with research showing that local people who knew about the existence of seasonal restrictions extracted significantly less (Velez & Lopez, 2013). Thirdly, rangers that build trusted relationships with local people may empower communities to take responsibility for crime control and generate collective efficacy—or the willingness of community members to intervene for the common good (Gill, Weisburd, Telep, Vitter, & Bennett, 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Secondly, it can increase local awareness of threats facing wildlife populations, which is important as research indicates that community perspectives on the condition and stability of nature influences illegal biodiversity exploitation (Gore, Lute, Ratsimbazafy, & Rajaonson, 2016). Furthermore, studies have emphasized the critical role that awareness of rules plays in compliance with environmental regulations (e.g., Hodgetts et al, 2018; Winter & May, 2001), with research showing that local people who knew about the existence of seasonal restrictions extracted significantly less (Velez & Lopez, 2013). Thirdly, rangers that build trusted relationships with local people may empower communities to take responsibility for crime control and generate collective efficacy—or the willingness of community members to intervene for the common good (Gill, Weisburd, Telep, Vitter, & Bennett, 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In field experiments, Velez and Lopez [38] demonstrate that in an indigenous community of the Colombian Amazon, older adults are more compliant with external regulations for natural resource extraction. The authors conclude that lifelong experience teaches older members of the community that following the rules positively affects the sustainability of the natural resources that serve as a basis for their livelihoods.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In fisheries, scholars have used economic field experiments to explore different factors such as communication, impatience, reciprocity, rules, and regulations affecting the likelihood of successful cooperation in the management of CPRs (Aswani et al, 2013;Castillo et al, 2011;Fehr and Leibbrandt, 2011;Lopez et al, 2012;Teh et al, 2011;Vélez and Lopez, 2013;Vélez et al, 2009Vélez et al, , 2012.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%