RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Does being intergenerationally accountable resolve intergenerational sustainability dilemma? JF Land Economics JO Land Econ FD University of Wisconsin Press SP 041420-0054R1 DO 10.3368/le.99.4.041420-0054R1 A1 Raja Rajendra Timilsina A1 Koji Kotani A1 Yoshinori Nakagawa A1 Tatsuyoshi Saijo YR 2023 UL http://le.uwpress.org/content/early/2023/05/15/le.99.4.041420-0054R1.abstract AB We address whether being intergenerationally accountable (IA) is effective at maintaining intergenerational sustainability (IS) through conducting lab-in-the-field experiments of IS dilemma games. In baseline, a sequence of six generations, each composed of three members, is organized, and each generation chooses whether to maintain IS (sustainable option) or to maximize their payoff by imposing costs on future generations (unsustainable option) via deliberation. In IA, each generation is additionally asked to provide reasons and advice to subsequent generations along with the decision. Results indicate that IA induces generations to choose the sustainable option with positive reasons and advice, enhancing IS.