Despite the increasing need for local and migrant populations to cooperate in natural resource governance, little attention has been paid to community contexts that influence individual cooperative behavioural choices among them. The present study demonstrates this influence through quantitative and qualitative data obtained in Shiraho village, Okinawa, Japan. Externalised cooperative behaviour was significantly different between locals and migrants, and the residents’ location in the social network was related to the level of cooperation, even though they had similar individual cooperative preferences. We find that people with dense social ties participate in community cooperation more than others, and that residents practise their cooperative behaviour in a way that fits community expectations: which was influenced by age and birth origin. Understanding the social context that guides individual behaviour for natural resource governance in a time when residential fluidity may keep increasing has relevance to other communities.
CITATION STYLE
Sugimoto, A., Sugino, H., van Putten, I., & Yagi, N. (2022). A study on community expectation for cooperative behaviour among locals and migrants: a case study of an Okinawan village, Japan. Maritime Studies, 21(1), 65–76. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40152-021-00254-x
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