Cooperation and the Commons

In Ethiopia, groups with a higher propensity to cooperate avoid the tragedy of the commons. Sustainably managing common natural resources, such as fisheries, water, and forests, is essential for our long-term survival. Many analysts have assumed, however, that people will maximize short-term self-benefits—for example, by cutting as much firewood as they can sell—and warned that this behavior will inevitably produce a “tragedy of the commons” (1), such as a stripped forest that no longer produces wood for anyone. But in laboratory simulations of such social dilemmas, the outcome is not always tragedy. Instead, a basic finding is that humans do not universally maximize short-term self-benefits, and can cooperate to produce shared, long-term benefits (2, 3). Similar findings have come from field studies of commonly managed resources (6–7). It has been challenging, however, to directly relate laboratory findings to resource conditions in the field, and identify the conditions that enhance cooperation. On page 961 of this issue, Rustagi et al. (8) help fill this gap. In an innovative study of Ethiopia's Oromo people, they use economic experiments and forest growth data to show that groups that had a higher proportion of “conditional cooperators” were more likely to invest in forest patrols aimed at enforcing firewood collection rules—and had more productive forests. They also show that other factors, including a group's distance to markets and the quality of its leadership, influenced the success of cooperative management.

[1]  Juan Camilo Cárdenas,et al.  Norms from outside and from inside: an experimental analysis on the governance of local ecosystems , 2004 .

[2]  Andreas Ortmann,et al.  Behavioral Game Theory, Colin F. Camerer, 2003, Russell Sage Foundation, New York, New York/Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey, hardcover, 544 pages, ISBN:0691090394, $65.00 , 2004 .

[3]  J. Cárdenas How Do Groups Solve Local Commons Dilemmas? Lessons from Experimental Economics in the Field , 2000 .

[4]  G. Hardin,et al.  The Tragedy of the Commons , 1968, Green Planet Blues.

[5]  E. Ostrom A General Framework for Analyzing Sustainability of Social-Ecological Systems , 2009, Science.

[6]  Jean-Philippe Platteau,et al.  Halting degradation of natural resources , 1995 .

[7]  E. Ostrom,et al.  Rules, Games, and Common-Pool Resources , 1994 .

[8]  Elinor Ostrom,et al.  Governing the commons , 1990 .

[9]  E. Fehr,et al.  Cooperation and Punishment in Public Goods Experiments , 1999, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[10]  B. Vollan Socio-ecological explanations for crowding-out effects from economic field experiments in southern Africa , 2008 .

[11]  Michael Kosfeld,et al.  Conditional Cooperation and Costly Monitoring Explain Success in Forest Commons Management , 2010, Science.

[12]  Colin Camerer Behavioral Game Theory , 1990 .

[13]  J. Cárdenas,et al.  Local environmental control and institutional crowding-out. , 2000 .

[14]  James J. Murphy,et al.  Centralized and Decentralized Management of Local Common Pool Resources in the Developing World: Experimental Evidence from Fishing Communities in Colombia , 2006 .

[15]  Jorge Higinio Maldonado,et al.  Evaluating the role of co-management in improving governance of marine protected areas: an experimental approach in the Colombian Caribbean. , 2010 .