scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Attitudes and cooperation: does gender matter in community-based forest management?

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the authors conducted psychometric surveys and trust experiments on 196 forest-dependent households in West Bengal, India during 2009-2010 and found that women are more conservation friendly and pro-social than men.
Abstract
Does gender matter in people's attitudes and cooperation in community-based natural resource management? If so, how do gender differences in conservation-related attitudes help or hinder sustaining the commons? Since biases ingrained in community norms and expectations often exclude women from decision making in co-management, it is imperative to find plausible answers to these queries in order to understand gender relations and cooperation in co-management. To this end, the authors conducted psychometric surveys and trust experiments on 196 forest-dependent households in West Bengal, India during 2009–2010. The findings suggest that, despite an overall negative perception about women's involvement in co-management, women are more conservation friendly and pro-social than men. It is also noticed that forest biomass and forest incomes as the indicators of sustainability have increased in those forest communities where women's proportional strength as decision makers is greater and people hold an overall positive conservation attitude.

read more

Citations
More filters
Book Chapter

Governing the Commons

WF Lam
Journal ArticleDOI

Factors influencing household participation in community forest management: evidence from Udon Thani Province, Thailand

TL;DR: Using survey data collected from 400 households across two villages in northeastern Thailand, this paper found that rural communities in Thailand have long managed and used forest resources for their livelihoods, and that the majority of the households in Thailand use forests for their daily living.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exclosures in people’s minds: perceptions and attitudes in the Tigray region, Ethiopia

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the perceptions and attitudes of local people living next to nine exclosures in the Tigray Region in Ethiopia and found that household heads expressed positive attitudes towards the existing ex-closures, while some were concerned about the future expansion of the exclave.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Gender Differences in Preferences

TL;DR: This paper reviewed the literature on gender differences in economic experiments and identified robust differences in risk preferences, social (other-regarding) preferences, and competitive preferences, speculating on the source of these differences and their implications.
Book

Rules, games, and common-pool resources

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore empirically, theoretically, and experimentally the nature of such institutions and the way they come about, and show that there are many instances where institutions develop to protect against overexploitation.
Posted Content

Who Trusts Others

TL;DR: The authors found that the strongest factors associated with low trust are: i) a recent history of traumatic experiences; ii) belonging to a group that historically felt discriminated against, such as minorities (blacks in particular) and women; iii) being economically unsuccessful in terms of income and education; iv) living in a racially mixed community and/or in one with a high degree of income disparity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Who trusts others

TL;DR: This paper found that the strongest factors associated with low trust are: (i) a recent history of traumatic experiences; (ii) belonging to a group that historically felt discriminated against, such as minorities (blacks in particular) and, to a lesser extent, women; (iii) being economically unsuccessful in terms of income and education; (iv) living in a racially mixed community and/or in one with a high degree of income disparity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social Capital and the Environment

TL;DR: In this article, a typology describes the evolution of groups through three stages, and indicates what kinds of policy support are needed to safeguard and spread achievements in watershed, irrigation, microfinance, forest, and integrated pest management.
Related Papers (5)