Project Participants

Generating Voluntary Compliance Across Doctrines and Nations: Interlocking the Behavioral and Regulatory Aspects of Governments’ Ability to Trust Public' Cooperation, Ethicality and Compliance (VCOMP)


Abstract:

The distinct advantages of enhancing the public’s voluntary compliance (VC) with regulations has made it an advantageous form ofgovernance. However, its use is limited by the extent to which governments and regulators can trust the public without jeopardizingregulatory purposes and harming other social values. Identifying and analysing the antecedents of VC across doctrines and countriescan enhance our theoretical understanding of the underlying nature of the interaction between countries and their residents, as wellas evaluate the relative efficacy of behaviourally based regulatory tools. This project proposes, examines, and develops a newconceptual model and a methodology that will facilitate a systematic comparison of the relative efficacy across different doctrinesand nations. This model will take into account national, organizational, situational, and individual factors and will draw on andcombine material from the fields of organizational, situational, and individual factors and will draw on and combine material from thefields of Compliance, Regulation, Behavioural Public Policy, Behavioural Ethics, Trust & Social Norms on how to advance public VC. Wewill empirically explore if and to what extent VC and greater trustworthiness by the public can be achieved across countries (high vs.low trust) using regulatory tools such as nudges, pledges, incentives, sanctions, and morality in the context of the situations of tax,environment, COVID-19 and ethics. The comprehensive picture of VC that will emerge from this project will include not just effectsizes, but also factors such as the proportion of those who comply, the sustainability of compliance, the impact on social norms, andthe likelihood of positive externalities (e.g., trust enhancement) following the enactment of a specific regulatory tool. Better insightsinto VC can help elucidate the descriptive and normative understanding of the nature of the interaction between countries and theirresidents.

Type:

EU

Funder:

Horizon Europe

Collaborative partners:

Bar-Ilan University, University of Amsterdam, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Maastricht University

Status:

Running

Start Date:

01-11-2022

End Date:

31-10-2027

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