Sure peer pressure can be used to get people to buy cheap crap, or to make them drive some huge gas guzzling land tank, but peer pressure can be used for good things as well. People are more likely to enroll in conservation programs if their neighbors do–a tendency that should be exploited when it comes to protecting the environment, according to results of a new study.
The research, to be published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) this week, is the first to focus on the phenomenon of social norms in the context of China’s conservation efforts, said scientist Jianguo “Jack” Liu of Michigan State University (MSU).
The study focused on a mammoth government initiative called Grain-to-Green that pays Chinese farmers to convert cropland back to forest.
“Much of the marginal cropland in rural communities has been converted from agriculture to forests through the Grain-to-Green Program, one of the largest ‘payment for ecosystem services’ programs in the world,” said Alan Tessier, program director in the National Science Foundation (NSF)’s Division of Environmental Biology.
“Results of this study show that a community’s social norms have substantial impacts on the sustainability of these conservation investments.”
Liu’s research was funded through NSF’s Coupled Natural and Human Systems (CNH) Program. CNH is co-funded by three NSF Directorates: Biological Sciences; Geosciences; and Social, Economic & Behavioral Sciences.
While money is a key factor in whether people sign up for the voluntary program, peer pressure also plays a surprisingly large role, Liu said.
“That’s the power of social norms,” he said. “It’s like recycling. If you see your neighbors doing it, you’re more likely to do it.”
A representative survey of households in China’s Wolong Nature Reserve for giant pandas found that both government payments and social norms had “significant impacts” on citizens’ intentions of re-enrolling in the Grain to Green program.
“In other words, people’s re-enrollment intentions can be affected by the re-enrollment decisions of their neighbors and tend to conform to the majority,” says Liu.
Xiaodong Chen, a doctoral student at MSU and lead author of the paper, said government officials should leverage these social norms along with economic and demographic trends when deciding how to support conversation programs such as Grain to Green.
“We found that, without considering the social norm factor, conservation payments may not be used efficiently,” Chen said.
“But if the government considers social norms as it decides where to invest money, it could obtain more environmental benefits in communities that are supportive of these programs than in those that aren’t.”
Added co-author and MSU scientist Frank Lupi: “Simply by taking account of the social norms, more conservation can be obtained from limited conservation budgets.”
The moral of this story is, do good for the planet, and make sure your neighbors know you are doing it. Peer pressure them into changing their ways. It’s science, and it’s good for the planet.