This data collection contains questionnaire responses; two local justice questionnaire templates (one market version and one non-market version), the questionnaire sampling method and the test images. The semi-structured questionnaire was designed to explore local conceptions of distributive, procedural and recognition justice, across Bolivia, China and Tanzania. This survey questionnaire data is related to the other experimental economics and participatory video data as they each form part of a collection of research into local conceptions of forest conservation, markets and environmental justice (see Related Resources).This research project will contribute to the challenge to reconcile forest conservation with social justice for local people in developing countries. To do so, the project will generate new empirical data about what social justice means to these local people and work with donors, NGOs and policy-makers to bring this new knowledge into practice. The project will conduct research in three countries, China, Tanzania and Venezuela. In each site we will research local conceptions of environmental justice, for example what different groups of local people consider to be the fairest way of making decisions about forest management options, and what they consider to be the fairest way of distributing the costs and benefits associated with any intervention. We will test for the presence of some well known principles of justice using surveys and experimental economic games. But we will also employ more open, ethnographic methods for a more inductive approach to identifying justice norms. In addition to comparisons across countries and across intervention type, we will compare local conceptions of justice with those that are evident in the conservation interventions in that particular site.
A semi-structured questionnaire used to explore local conceptions of distributive, procedural and recognition justice. The survey datasets from each case site were linked through use of a unique ID assigned for each person. Data was initially be recorded on paper using pre-printed survey forms and later input into SPSS for analysis. Responses to open questioned were translated into English.