Stigma Mitigation and the Importance of Redundant Treatments

Author(s)Kecinski, Maik
Author(s)Keisner, Deborah Kerley
Author(s)Messer, Kent D.
Author(s)Schulze, William D.
Date Accessioned2015-10-13T16:31:46Z
Date Available2015-10-13T16:31:46Z
Publication Date2015-05
AbstractDisgust can evoke strong behavioral responses. Sometimes these extreme visceral responses can lead to stigmatization—an overreaction to a risk. In fact, disgust may be so inhibiting that it leads people to refuse to consume completely safe items such as treated drinking water, leading to important economic and policy implications. Using economic experiments, we provide a measure of the behavioral response to disgust. Our findings suggest that when monetary incentives are provided, the behavioral response may have been exaggerated by previous studies that have relied on survey methods. Furthermore, mitigation steps successfully reduce the stigma behavior. In fact, the results suggest that stigma is primarily reduced not by a specific mitigation step taken but by how many steps are taken consecutively. These results have important implications for policies addressing issues such as the global shortage of drinking water. Some efforts to resolve the shortage have involved recycled water that is completely safe to drink but is often rejected because of reactions of disgust.en_US
SponsorThe National Science Foundation (EPS-1301765 and DRMS-0551289)en_US
URLhttp://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/17149
Languageen_USen_US
PublisherDepartment of Applied Economics and Statistics, University of Delaware, Newark, DE.en_US
Part of SeriesRR15-01
KeywordsDisgusten_US
KeywordsStigma mitigationen_US
KeywordsRisken_US
KeywordsExperimental economicsen_US
TitleStigma Mitigation and the Importance of Redundant Treatmentsen_US
TypeResearch Reporten_US
Files
Original bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
RR15-01.pdf
Size:
517.38 KB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
License bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
license.txt
Size:
2.22 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed upon to submission
Description: