Reputation and Household Recycling Practices: Field Experiments in Costa Rica.

Pro-environmental behavior is the willingness to cooperate and contribute to environmental public goods. A good understanding of why individuals undertake pro-environmental actions is important in order to construct policies that are aligned with preferences and actual behavioral patterns, such as concern for social esteem and reputation. In this paper, we present the results of a framed field experiment that explores reputation formation as a driver in support of household recycling practices. We use a “shame” and a “pride” treatment to test which is more effective, if at all, in increasing recycling effort. We find that reputational concerns indeed play a role in shaping individual pro-environmental behavior. Surprisingly, subjects cooperate more if the situation is framed as avoiding shame (bad reputation) rather than as acquiring pride and gratitude (good reputation). The actual experiment is based on a real recycling program, with participants who are heads of urban households in Costa Rica.

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Main Authors: Alpízar, Francisco 415, Gsottbauer, Elisabeth
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:spa
Published: 2013
Subjects:RECICLAJE, EXPERIMENTOS DE CAMPO, BIENES PUBLICOS, BASURA DOMESTICA, DESARROLLO ECONOMICO, RESÍDUOS SÓLIDOS, HOGARES, REEMBOLSO, MONTANTE COMPENSATORIO,
Online Access:https://repositorio.bibliotecaorton.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/9536
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spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:1485482022-02-17T19:16:45ZReputation and Household Recycling Practices: Field Experiments in Costa Rica. Alpízar, Francisco 415 Gsottbauer, Elisabeth text2013spaPro-environmental behavior is the willingness to cooperate and contribute to environmental public goods. A good understanding of why individuals undertake pro-environmental actions is important in order to construct policies that are aligned with preferences and actual behavioral patterns, such as concern for social esteem and reputation. In this paper, we present the results of a framed field experiment that explores reputation formation as a driver in support of household recycling practices. We use a “shame” and a “pride” treatment to test which is more effective, if at all, in increasing recycling effort. We find that reputational concerns indeed play a role in shaping individual pro-environmental behavior. Surprisingly, subjects cooperate more if the situation is framed as avoiding shame (bad reputation) rather than as acquiring pride and gratitude (good reputation). The actual experiment is based on a real recycling program, with participants who are heads of urban households in Costa Rica.Pro-environmental behavior is the willingness to cooperate and contribute to environmental public goods. A good understanding of why individuals undertake pro-environmental actions is important in order to construct policies that are aligned with preferences and actual behavioral patterns, such as concern for social esteem and reputation. In this paper, we present the results of a framed field experiment that explores reputation formation as a driver in support of household recycling practices. We use a “shame” and a “pride” treatment to test which is more effective, if at all, in increasing recycling effort. We find that reputational concerns indeed play a role in shaping individual pro-environmental behavior. Surprisingly, subjects cooperate more if the situation is framed as avoiding shame (bad reputation) rather than as acquiring pride and gratitude (good reputation). The actual experiment is based on a real recycling program, with participants who are heads of urban households in Costa Rica.RECICLAJEEXPERIMENTOS DE CAMPO BIENES PUBLICOS BASURA DOMESTICA DESARROLLO ECONOMICO RESÍDUOS SÓLIDOS HOGARES REEMBOLSO MONTANTE COMPENSATORIO https://repositorio.bibliotecaorton.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/9536
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
language spa
topic RECICLAJE
EXPERIMENTOS DE CAMPO
BIENES PUBLICOS
BASURA DOMESTICA
DESARROLLO ECONOMICO
RESÍDUOS SÓLIDOS
HOGARES
REEMBOLSO
MONTANTE COMPENSATORIO
RECICLAJE
EXPERIMENTOS DE CAMPO
BIENES PUBLICOS
BASURA DOMESTICA
DESARROLLO ECONOMICO
RESÍDUOS SÓLIDOS
HOGARES
REEMBOLSO
MONTANTE COMPENSATORIO
spellingShingle RECICLAJE
EXPERIMENTOS DE CAMPO
BIENES PUBLICOS
BASURA DOMESTICA
DESARROLLO ECONOMICO
RESÍDUOS SÓLIDOS
HOGARES
REEMBOLSO
MONTANTE COMPENSATORIO
RECICLAJE
EXPERIMENTOS DE CAMPO
BIENES PUBLICOS
BASURA DOMESTICA
DESARROLLO ECONOMICO
RESÍDUOS SÓLIDOS
HOGARES
REEMBOLSO
MONTANTE COMPENSATORIO
Alpízar, Francisco 415
Gsottbauer, Elisabeth
Reputation and Household Recycling Practices: Field Experiments in Costa Rica.
description Pro-environmental behavior is the willingness to cooperate and contribute to environmental public goods. A good understanding of why individuals undertake pro-environmental actions is important in order to construct policies that are aligned with preferences and actual behavioral patterns, such as concern for social esteem and reputation. In this paper, we present the results of a framed field experiment that explores reputation formation as a driver in support of household recycling practices. We use a “shame” and a “pride” treatment to test which is more effective, if at all, in increasing recycling effort. We find that reputational concerns indeed play a role in shaping individual pro-environmental behavior. Surprisingly, subjects cooperate more if the situation is framed as avoiding shame (bad reputation) rather than as acquiring pride and gratitude (good reputation). The actual experiment is based on a real recycling program, with participants who are heads of urban households in Costa Rica.
format Texto
topic_facet RECICLAJE
EXPERIMENTOS DE CAMPO
BIENES PUBLICOS
BASURA DOMESTICA
DESARROLLO ECONOMICO
RESÍDUOS SÓLIDOS
HOGARES
REEMBOLSO
MONTANTE COMPENSATORIO
author Alpízar, Francisco 415
Gsottbauer, Elisabeth
author_facet Alpízar, Francisco 415
Gsottbauer, Elisabeth
author_sort Alpízar, Francisco 415
title Reputation and Household Recycling Practices: Field Experiments in Costa Rica.
title_short Reputation and Household Recycling Practices: Field Experiments in Costa Rica.
title_full Reputation and Household Recycling Practices: Field Experiments in Costa Rica.
title_fullStr Reputation and Household Recycling Practices: Field Experiments in Costa Rica.
title_full_unstemmed Reputation and Household Recycling Practices: Field Experiments in Costa Rica.
title_sort reputation and household recycling practices: field experiments in costa rica.
publishDate 2013
url https://repositorio.bibliotecaorton.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/9536
work_keys_str_mv AT alpizarfrancisco415 reputationandhouseholdrecyclingpracticesfieldexperimentsincostarica
AT gsottbauerelisabeth reputationandhouseholdrecyclingpracticesfieldexperimentsincostarica
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