TY - JOUR T1 - Empathy-Conditioned Conservation: “Walking in the Shoes of Others” as a Conservation Farmer JF - Land Economics JO - Land Econ SP - 433 LP - 452 DO - 10.3368/le.87.3.433 VL - 87 IS - 3 AU - Robert J. Sheeder AU - Gary D. Lynne Y1 - 2011/08/01 UR - http://le.uwpress.org/content/87/3/433.abstract N2 - Conservation tillage on farms can improve downstream water quality. Using a dual-interests theoretical framework guided by the metaeconomics approach, this paper examines the role of self-interest and shared other-interest in the conservation tillage adoption decision. The data is from a 2007 survey of farmers in the Blue River/Tuttle Creek watershed of Nebraska and Kansas. Logit models show that farmers who temper their pursuit of self-interest with shared other-interest reflecting empathy-sympathy are more likely to adopt conservation tillage. Habit and control also play a role. Farmers pursue a joint and interdependent own-interest and not only self-interest as presumed in microeconomics. (JEL Q25, Q28) ER -