Conservation Agreements: Relational Contracts with Endogenous Monitoring

Author:

Gjertsen Heidi1,Groves Theodore2,Miller David A3,Niesten Eduard1,Squires Dale4,Watson Joel5

Affiliation:

1. EcoAdvisors

2. University of California

3. University of Michigan

4. NOAA/NMFS Southwest Fisheries Science Center

5. University of  California

Abstract

Abstract This article examines the structure and performance of conservation agreements, which are relational contracts used across the world to protect natural resources. Key elements of these agreements are (1) they are ongoing arrangements between a local community and an outside party, typically a nongovernmental organization (NGO); (2) they feature payments in exchange for conservation services; (3) the prospects for success depend on the NGO engaging in costly monitoring to detect whether the community is foregoing short-term gains to protect the resource; (4) lacking a strong external enforcement system, they rely on self-enforcement; and (5) the parties have the opportunity to renegotiate at any time. A repeated-game model is developed and utilized to organize an evaluation of real conservation agreements, using three case studies as representative examples. (JEL D74, D86, Q20, Q56)

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Law,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Economics and Econometrics

Reference52 articles.

Cited by 5 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. The Conservation Multiplier;Journal of Political Economy;2023-07-01

2. An Active-Contracting Perspective on Equilibrium Selection in Relational Contracts;Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics;2023

3. Reconciling Relational Contracting and Hold-up: A Model of Repeated Negotiations;Journal of the European Economic Association;2022-08-26

4. Contracts and Induced Institutional Change;The Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization;2022-05-28

5. Theoretical Foundations of Relational Incentive Contracts;Annual Review of Economics;2021-08-05

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