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Collective Action and the Risk of Ecosystem Regime Shifts: Insights from a Laboratory Experiment

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dc.contributor.author Schill, Caroline
dc.contributor.author Lindahl, Therese
dc.contributor.author Crépin, Anne-Sophie
dc.date.accessioned 2015-05-22T14:25:08Z
dc.date.available 2015-05-22T14:25:08Z
dc.date.issued 2015 en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10535/9734
dc.description.abstract "Ecosystems can undergo regime shifts that potentially lead to a substantial decrease in the availability of provisioning ecosystem services. Recent research suggests that the frequency and intensity of regime shifts increase with growing anthropogenic pressure, so understanding the underlying social-ecological dynamics is crucial, particularly in contexts where livelihoods depend heavily on local ecosystem services. In such settings, ecosystem services are often derived from common-pool resources. The limited capacity to predict regime shifts is a major challenge for common-pool resource management, as well as for systematic empirical analysis of individual and group behavior, because of the need for extensive preshift and postshift data. Unsurprisingly, current knowledge is mostly based on theoretical models. We examine behavioral group responses to a latent endogenously driven regime shift in a laboratory experiment. If the group exploited the common-pool resource beyond a certain threshold level, its renewal rate dropped drastically. To determine how the risk of such a latent shift affects resource management and collective action, we compared four experimental treatments in which groups were faced with a latent shift with different probability levels (0.1, 0.5, 0.9, 1.0). Our results suggest that different probability levels do not make people more or less likely to exploit the resource beyond its critical potential threshold. However, when the likelihood of the latent shift is certain or high, people appear more prone to agree initially on a common exploitation strategy, which in turn is a predictor for averting the latent shift. Moreover, risk appears to have a positive effect on collective action, but the magnitude of this effect is influenced by how risk and probabilities are communicated and perceived." en_US
dc.language English en_US
dc.subject uncertainty en_US
dc.subject social-ecological systems en_US
dc.subject risk en_US
dc.subject laboratory experiments en_US
dc.subject common pool resources en_US
dc.subject cooperation en_US
dc.title Collective Action and the Risk of Ecosystem Regime Shifts: Insights from a Laboratory Experiment en_US
dc.type Journal Article en_US
dc.type.published published en_US
dc.type.methodology Case Study en_US
dc.subject.sector Theory en_US
dc.identifier.citationjournal Ecology and Society en_US
dc.identifier.citationvolume 20 en_US
dc.identifier.citationnumber 1 en_US
dc.identifier.citationmonth March en_US


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