The bean method as a tool to measure sensitive behavior
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In: Conservation Biology, Vol. 35, No. 2, 04.2021, p. 722-732.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - The bean method as a tool to measure sensitive behavior
AU - Jones, Sorrel
AU - Papworth, Sarah
AU - Keane, Aidan
AU - Vickery, Juliet
AU - St John, Freya A. V.
PY - 2021/4
Y1 - 2021/4
N2 - Conservationists need to measure human behaviour to guide decisions and evaluate their impact. However, activities can be misreported and reporting accuracy might change following conservation interventions, making it hard to verify any apparent changes. Techniques for asking sensitive questions are increasingly integrated into survey designs to improve data quality but some can be costly or hard for non-experts to implement. We demonstrate a straightforward, low-cost approach, the “bean method” in which respondents give anonymous answers by adding a coloured bean to a jar to denote a yes or no response. We apply the bean method to measure wildmeat hunting and trading over two years at a conservation project site in Gola Forest, Liberia, and extend the technique to accommodate questions about hunting frequency. We compare responses given using the bean method and direct questions, for groups that did and did not participate in conservation interventions. Results from the bean16 method corresponded to those from direct reports, giving no indication of change in question sensitivity following conservation interventions. Estimates from both methods indicate that wildmeat trading decreased in project and non-project households (from 36% to 20%), while hunting decreased in one project group (38% to 28%). Where inconsistent answers were given (2 to 6% of respondents), differences were in both directions and were most likely attributable to measurement error. The bean method was quick and straightforward to administer in a low literacy setting. We show it can be modified for answers of more 22 than two categories and consider it a valuable tool that could be adapted for a wide range of conservation settings.
AB - Conservationists need to measure human behaviour to guide decisions and evaluate their impact. However, activities can be misreported and reporting accuracy might change following conservation interventions, making it hard to verify any apparent changes. Techniques for asking sensitive questions are increasingly integrated into survey designs to improve data quality but some can be costly or hard for non-experts to implement. We demonstrate a straightforward, low-cost approach, the “bean method” in which respondents give anonymous answers by adding a coloured bean to a jar to denote a yes or no response. We apply the bean method to measure wildmeat hunting and trading over two years at a conservation project site in Gola Forest, Liberia, and extend the technique to accommodate questions about hunting frequency. We compare responses given using the bean method and direct questions, for groups that did and did not participate in conservation interventions. Results from the bean16 method corresponded to those from direct reports, giving no indication of change in question sensitivity following conservation interventions. Estimates from both methods indicate that wildmeat trading decreased in project and non-project households (from 36% to 20%), while hunting decreased in one project group (38% to 28%). Where inconsistent answers were given (2 to 6% of respondents), differences were in both directions and were most likely attributable to measurement error. The bean method was quick and straightforward to administer in a low literacy setting. We show it can be modified for answers of more 22 than two categories and consider it a valuable tool that could be adapted for a wide range of conservation settings.
KW - conservation
KW - Gola Forest
KW - hunting
KW - livelihood interventions
KW - social desirability bias
KW - social science
KW - specialized questioning technique
U2 - 10.1111/cobi.13607
DO - 10.1111/cobi.13607
M3 - Article
VL - 35
SP - 722
EP - 732
JO - Conservation Biology
JF - Conservation Biology
SN - 0888-8892
IS - 2
ER -