Cooperation Is Not Enough Exploring Social-Ecological Micro-Foundations for Sustainable Common-Pool Resource Use
Authored by Maja Schlueter, Nanda Wijermans, Caroline Schill, Therese Lindahl
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0157796
Sponsors:
Stockholm Resilience Centre
Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Pseudocode
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/5181/releases/1.0.0/
Abstract
Cooperation amongst resource users holds the key to overcoming the
social dilemma that characterizes community-based common-pool resource
management. But is cooperation alone enough to achieve sustainable
resource use? The short answer is no. Developing management strategies
in a complex social-ecological environment also requires ecological
knowledge and approaches to deal with perceived environmental
uncertainty. Recent behavioral experimental research indicates variation
in the degree to which a group of users can identify a sustainable
exploitation level. In this paper, we identify social-ecological
micro-foundations that facilitate cooperative sustainable common-pool
resource use. We do so by using an agent-based model (ABM) that is
informed by behavioral common-pool resource experiments. In these
experiments, groups that cooperate do not necessarily manage the
resource sustainably, but also over- or underexploit. By reproducing the
patterns of the behavioral experiments in a qualitative way, the ABM
represents a social-ecological explanation for the experimental
observations. We find that the ecological knowledge of each group member
cannot sufficiently explain the relationship between cooperation and
sustainable resource use. Instead, the development of a sustainable
exploitation level depends on the distribution of ecological knowledge
among the group members, their influence on each other's knowledge, and
the environmental uncertainty the individuals perceive. The study
provides insights about critical social-ecological micro-foundations
underpinning collective action and sustainable resource management.
These insights may inform policy-making, but also point to future
research needs regarding the mechanisms of social learning, the
development of shared management strategies and the interplay of social
and ecological uncertainty.
Tags
Competition
Agent-based models
Management
Collective Action
preferences
information
Mechanisms
Odd
protocol
Environmental uncertainty
Dilemmas