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dc.date.accessioned 2025-03-14T13:57:43Z
dc.date.available 2025-03-14T13:57:43Z
dc.date.issued 2025-03
dc.identifier.uri http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/177388
dc.description.abstract Experts argue that the adoption of healthy sanitation practices, such as hand washing and latrine use, requires focusing on the entire community rather than individual behaviors. According to this view, one limiting factor in ending open defecation lies in the capacity of the community to collectively act toward this goal. Each member of a community bears the private cost of contributing by washing hands and using latrines, but the benefits through better health outcomes depend on whether other community members also opt out of open defecation. We rely on a community-based intervention carried out in Mali as an illustrative example (Community-Led Total Sanitation or CLTS). Using a series of experiments conducted in 121 villages and designed to measure the willingness of community members to contribute to a local public good, we investigate the process of participation in a collective action problem setting. Our focus is on two types of activities: (1) gathering of community members to encourage public discussion of the collective action problem, and (2) facilitation by a community champion of the adoption of individual actions to attain the socially preferred outcome. In games, communication helps raise public good provision, and both open discussion and facilitated ones have the same impact. When a community member facilitates a discussion after an open discussion session, public good contributions increase, but there are no gains from opening up the discussion after a facilitated session. Community members who choose to contribute in the no-communication treatment are not better facilitators than those who choose not to contribute. en
dc.language en es
dc.subject public good provision es
dc.subject behavioral experiments es
dc.subject community-based development es
dc.subject sanitation es
dc.title Effective community mobilization: evidence from Mali en
dc.type Articulo es
sedici.identifier.other H41, O12, C93, Q56 es
sedici.identifier.issn 1853-0168 es
sedici.creator.person Alzúa, María Laura es
sedici.creator.person Cardenas, Juan Camilo es
sedici.creator.person Djebbari, Habiba es
sedici.subject.materias Ciencias Económicas es
sedici.description.fulltext true es
mods.originInfo.place Centro de Estudios Distributivos, Laborales y Sociales es
sedici.subtype Documento de trabajo es
sedici.rights.license Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
sedici.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
sedici.relation.event no. 347 es
sedici.description.peerReview peer-review es
sedici.relation.journalTitle Documentos de Trabajo del CEDLAS es


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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) Excepto donde se diga explícitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente licencia Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)