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Motivational crowding in sustainable development interventions

Agrawal, Arun, Ashwini Chhatre, and Elisabeth R. Gerber. Motivational Crowding in Sustainable Development Interventions. International Forestry Resources and Institutions Program, Apr. 2015. Web. (Working paper).

Abstract:

We use a quasi-experimental research design to study the extent of motivational crowding in a recent sustainable development intervention in northern India. The project provided participants with both private and communal material benefits to enhance their incomes, and environmental and social information to inculcate pro-environmental motivations. We compare changes in reported motivations of participants for conserving forest resources before and after project implementation, with changes in reported motivations of matched non-participants. We find that villagers who received private economic benefits were more likely to change from an environmental to an economic motivation for forest protection, whereas those who engaged in communal activities related to the project were less likely to change from an environmental to an economic motivation. These results, which indicate a substantial but conditional degree of motivational crowding, clarify the relationships between institutional change, incentives and motivations, and have important implications for the design of sustainable development interventions.

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