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Replicating: "Playing Politics with Environmental Protection: The Political Economy of Designating Protected Areas"

Author

Listed:
  • Villalobos, Laura
  • Caviglia-Harris, Jill
  • Jayalath, Tharaka

Abstract

Mangonnet et al. (2022) examine whether political alignment at the national and sub-national levels explain the spatial designation of Protected Areas (PAs) in Brazil. Their identification relies on spatial discontinuities in political alignment across municipalities. They find that a president-mayor coalition alignment reduces the incidence of PAs by about one percentage point, whereas they find no party alignment effects. We were able to reproduce the paper's findings using the same code and software. Alternative software routines reproduce their results with small and inconsequential numerical differences. Moreover, robustness replications find consistent results for one out the two treatments. Finally, we find no evidence of fabrication of data.

Suggested Citation

  • Villalobos, Laura & Caviglia-Harris, Jill & Jayalath, Tharaka, 2023. "Replicating: "Playing Politics with Environmental Protection: The Political Economy of Designating Protected Areas"," I4R Discussion Paper Series 73, The Institute for Replication (I4R).
  • Handle: RePEc:zbw:i4rdps:73
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Keele, Luke J. & Titiunik, Rocío, 2015. "Geographic Boundaries as Regression Discontinuities," Political Analysis, Cambridge University Press, vol. 23(1), pages 127-155, January.
    2. Federico Belotti & Partha Deb & Willard G. Manning & Edward C. Norton, 2015. "twopm: Two-part models," Stata Journal, StataCorp LP, vol. 15(1), pages 3-20, March.
    3. Andre Fernandes Tomon Avelino & Kathy Baylis & Jordi Honey-Rosés, 2016. "Goldilocks and the Raster Grid: Selecting Scale when Evaluating Conservation Programs," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 11(12), pages 1-24, December.
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    replication study; robustness replicability; reproducibility;
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