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Selim Gulesci (Trinity College Dublin)
Salle 212
Séminaire recherche. Changing Harmful Norms through Information and Coordination: Experimental Evidence from Somalia
Changing Harmful Norms through Information and Coordination: Experimental Evidence from Somalia
Selim Gulesci
Trinity College Dublin, BREAD, CEPR, J-PAL, LEAP and TIME
Coauteurs : Pedro de Souza Ferreira, Eliana La Ferrara, David Smerdon, Munshi Sulaiman
Résumé
Female Genital Cutting (FGC) is a harmful practice affecting millions of women around the world. In Somalia, the prevalence of FGC is nearly universal (99 percent). We experimentally evaluate two interventions to decrease the prevalence of the most harmful type of FGC (infibulation) in Somalia: (1) correcting misperceptions about the support for the practice, and (2) public declarations of community members to abandon FGC. We find that on average community members overestimate the community support for infibulation. Correcting this misperception is effective in reducing infibulation. In the short-term, this leads to an increase in the intermediate type of FGC (Sunna), but it also increases the likelihood that parents report they plan not to cut their younger, uncut daughters. The public declaration treatment does not significantly affect infibulation, except in communities where participants had high priors about community support for abandoning the practice.