Dear colleagues,

We (Mark Buntaine, Polycarp Komakech, and I) are excited to share our 
latest research published in the PNAS, "Social competition drives 
collective action to reduce informal waste burning in Uganda."  Check it 
out: https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2319712121

Abstract
Improving urban air quality is a pressing challenge in the Global South. A 
key source of air pollution is the informal burning of household waste. 
Reducing informal burning requires governments to develop formal systems 
for waste disposal and for residents to adopt new disposal behaviors. Using 
a randomized experiment, we show that social competitions between pairs of 
neighborhoods in Nansana municipality, Uganda, galvanized leadership and 
inspired collective action to reduce informal burning. All 44 neighborhoods 
in the study received a public health campaign, while 22 treated 
neighborhoods were paired and competed to reduce waste burning over an 8-mo 
period. Treated neighborhoods showed a 24 percent reduction (95% CI: 11 to 
35 percent) in waste burning relative to control neighborhoods at the end 
of the competition period. There is no evidence that treated neighborhoods 
experienced a rebound in waste burning several months after the 
competitions. Community leaders reported greater effort in coordinating 
residents and more pride in their neighborhood when assigned to the 
competition treatment. These results suggest that creating focal points for 
leadership and collective action can be an effective and low-cost strategy 
to address policy problems that require broad participation and costly 
behavior change.

Best,

Victoria

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