Does balancing gender composition lead to more prosocial outcomes? Experimental evidence of equality in public goods and extraction games from rural Kenya

There is resurging interest in community-based natural resource management (CBNRM) as an approach for achieving global biodiversity conservation goals. Yet, CBNRM remains dominated by men, elevating the importance of designing programs that give voice and agency to women. Arguments for increasing ge...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Masuda, Yuta J., Waterfield, Gina, Castilla, Carolina, Kang, Shiteng, Zhang, Wei
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/141208
_version_ 1855519798968975360
author Masuda, Yuta J.
Waterfield, Gina
Castilla, Carolina
Kang, Shiteng
Zhang, Wei
author_browse Castilla, Carolina
Kang, Shiteng
Masuda, Yuta J.
Waterfield, Gina
Zhang, Wei
author_facet Masuda, Yuta J.
Waterfield, Gina
Castilla, Carolina
Kang, Shiteng
Zhang, Wei
author_sort Masuda, Yuta J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description There is resurging interest in community-based natural resource management (CBNRM) as an approach for achieving global biodiversity conservation goals. Yet, CBNRM remains dominated by men, elevating the importance of designing programs that give voice and agency to women. Arguments for increasing gender balance within CBNRM often assume women have strong preferences for equality and altruism and would therefore be better environmental stewards. Evidence on the effect of gender balance on commons management, however, remains mixed. We report on two framed field experimental games with community members directly engaged in the use and management of natural resources in rural Kenya. Participants were randomly assigned to single-gender (all male n = 23; all female n = 28) or mixed gender groups (n = 36) to assess the role of gender composition on group and individual decisions. The two games provide unique insights into the give (public good games) and take (extraction games) decisions common in natural resource management. We find mixed gender groups tend to achieve more socially optimal outcomes than single-gender groups in the public goods game context, but all male groups tended to conserve the most in the extraction game. Women are not necessarily more likely to make prosocial decisions than men, and factors such as framing and social relations affect decisions. Our results indicate gender composition affects group decision-making and is therefore important for commons management, and that mixed gender groups can be more effective than single-gender groups. Improving gender balance in CBNRM may help achieve more desirable outcomes from a social and conservation perspective but understanding decision-making contexts is critical.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace141208
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1412082025-10-26T13:02:06Z Does balancing gender composition lead to more prosocial outcomes? Experimental evidence of equality in public goods and extraction games from rural Kenya Masuda, Yuta J. Waterfield, Gina Castilla, Carolina Kang, Shiteng Zhang, Wei gender public good games public goods extraction experimentation equality communities There is resurging interest in community-based natural resource management (CBNRM) as an approach for achieving global biodiversity conservation goals. Yet, CBNRM remains dominated by men, elevating the importance of designing programs that give voice and agency to women. Arguments for increasing gender balance within CBNRM often assume women have strong preferences for equality and altruism and would therefore be better environmental stewards. Evidence on the effect of gender balance on commons management, however, remains mixed. We report on two framed field experimental games with community members directly engaged in the use and management of natural resources in rural Kenya. Participants were randomly assigned to single-gender (all male n = 23; all female n = 28) or mixed gender groups (n = 36) to assess the role of gender composition on group and individual decisions. The two games provide unique insights into the give (public good games) and take (extraction games) decisions common in natural resource management. We find mixed gender groups tend to achieve more socially optimal outcomes than single-gender groups in the public goods game context, but all male groups tended to conserve the most in the extraction game. Women are not necessarily more likely to make prosocial decisions than men, and factors such as framing and social relations affect decisions. Our results indicate gender composition affects group decision-making and is therefore important for commons management, and that mixed gender groups can be more effective than single-gender groups. Improving gender balance in CBNRM may help achieve more desirable outcomes from a social and conservation perspective but understanding decision-making contexts is critical. 2022-08 2024-04-12T13:37:28Z 2024-04-12T13:37:28Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/141208 en Open Access Elsevier Masuda, Yuta J.; Waterfield, Gina; Castilla, Carolina; Kang, Shiteng; and Zhang, Wei. 2022. Does balancing gender composition lead to more prosocial outcomes? Experimental evidence of equality in public goods and extraction games from rural Kenya. World Development 156(August 2022): 105923. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2022.105923
spellingShingle gender
public good games
public goods
extraction
experimentation
equality
communities
Masuda, Yuta J.
Waterfield, Gina
Castilla, Carolina
Kang, Shiteng
Zhang, Wei
Does balancing gender composition lead to more prosocial outcomes? Experimental evidence of equality in public goods and extraction games from rural Kenya
title Does balancing gender composition lead to more prosocial outcomes? Experimental evidence of equality in public goods and extraction games from rural Kenya
title_full Does balancing gender composition lead to more prosocial outcomes? Experimental evidence of equality in public goods and extraction games from rural Kenya
title_fullStr Does balancing gender composition lead to more prosocial outcomes? Experimental evidence of equality in public goods and extraction games from rural Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Does balancing gender composition lead to more prosocial outcomes? Experimental evidence of equality in public goods and extraction games from rural Kenya
title_short Does balancing gender composition lead to more prosocial outcomes? Experimental evidence of equality in public goods and extraction games from rural Kenya
title_sort does balancing gender composition lead to more prosocial outcomes experimental evidence of equality in public goods and extraction games from rural kenya
topic gender
public good games
public goods
extraction
experimentation
equality
communities
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/141208
work_keys_str_mv AT masudayutaj doesbalancinggendercompositionleadtomoreprosocialoutcomesexperimentalevidenceofequalityinpublicgoodsandextractiongamesfromruralkenya
AT waterfieldgina doesbalancinggendercompositionleadtomoreprosocialoutcomesexperimentalevidenceofequalityinpublicgoodsandextractiongamesfromruralkenya
AT castillacarolina doesbalancinggendercompositionleadtomoreprosocialoutcomesexperimentalevidenceofequalityinpublicgoodsandextractiongamesfromruralkenya
AT kangshiteng doesbalancinggendercompositionleadtomoreprosocialoutcomesexperimentalevidenceofequalityinpublicgoodsandextractiongamesfromruralkenya
AT zhangwei doesbalancinggendercompositionleadtomoreprosocialoutcomesexperimentalevidenceofequalityinpublicgoodsandextractiongamesfromruralkenya