2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.jebo.2015.02.018
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Diversity and the provision of public goods: Experimental evidence from South Africa

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Cited by 11 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 51 publications
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“…Interestingly, yet, the finding is consistent with results from Uruguay, where small-scale fishers did not extract more in mixed-village groups than in single-village groups in a CPR experiment that focussed on punishment [47]. Previous social dilemma experiments not related to natural resource use have similarly found that cooperation in heterogeneous groups (individuals with different ethnicities) can be as high as in homogeneous groups [59,60]. The conclusion we take away from this result is that sociocultural heterogeneity of the type that we investigated does not generally limit cooperativeness in CPR dilemmas.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…Interestingly, yet, the finding is consistent with results from Uruguay, where small-scale fishers did not extract more in mixed-village groups than in single-village groups in a CPR experiment that focussed on punishment [47]. Previous social dilemma experiments not related to natural resource use have similarly found that cooperation in heterogeneous groups (individuals with different ethnicities) can be as high as in homogeneous groups [59,60]. The conclusion we take away from this result is that sociocultural heterogeneity of the type that we investigated does not generally limit cooperativeness in CPR dilemmas.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…(Van Der Merwe et al ., 2008; Bashagi and Muchapondwa, 2009; Klasen and Woolard, 2009; Brick et al ., 2012; Muchapondwa and Sterner, 2012; Baten and Fourie, 2015; Burns and Keswell, 2015; Barrientos et al ., 2016; Dikgang and Muchapondwa, 2016; Eyal and Burns, 2019)…”
Section: Data Analysis and Interpretationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the above background, the researcher initiates a novel attempt to research and understand the predominant themes actively contributing towards economic development in South Africa; for merely talking about economic development and growth is not enough, until and unless it is reviewed in terms of plausible opportunities and threats (Mmopelwa et al ., 2009; Abdelfattah et al ., 2014; Baten and Fourie, 2015; Burns and Keswell, 2015; Baker et al ., 2016; Kollamparambil, 2020). This work aims to comprehend research conducted towards the South African economy in the last 25 years of time by the systematic literature review and bibliometric analysis.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Harrison et al (1998) make an important distinction between "surface-level" characteristics-features that are visible and can be perceived readily-and "deep-level" characteristics, such as personality and ability. The current research focuses on actual surfacelevel diversity (i.e., gender and race) because demographic differences are most visible as groups are in their beginning stages (Harrison et al, 2002) and because people may rely on demographic differences as a cognitive heuristic to infer deep-level differences (Burns & Keswell, 2015).…”
Section: Composition On Identification In Small Groupsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Harrison, Price, and Bell (1998) make an important distinction between “surface-level” characteristics—features that are visible and can be perceived readily—and “deep-level” characteristics, such as personality and ability. The current research focuses on actual surface-level diversity (i.e., gender and race) because demographic differences are most visible as groups are in their beginning stages (Harrison et al, 2002) and because people may rely on demographic differences as a cognitive heuristic to infer deep-level differences (Burns & Keswell, 2015). Furthermore, surface-level diversity has also found to be a barrier to achieving group consensus in deep-level characteristics, with one study finding that consensus in values was harder to achieve in more culturally diverse groups than in more homogenous groups (Meeussen, Schaafsma, & Phalet, 2014).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%