Studying institutions as part of the research on cultural evolu-tion prompts us to analyze one very important mechanism of cultural evolution: institutions do distribute cultural variants in the population. Also, it enables relating current research on cultural evolution to some more traditional social sciences: institutions, often seen as macro-social entities, are analyzed in terms of their constitutive micro-phenomena. This article presents Sperber’s characterization of institutions, and then gives some hints about the set of phenomena to which it ap-plies. Culture evolves through the advent of cognitive causal chains, which span across individuals and their environment, and which distribute mental representations and public pro-duction ...
Our species has the peculiar ability to accumulate cultural innovations over multiple generations, a...
Development economics witnessed an ‘institutional turn’ from the 1990s onwards, with an increasing n...
A growing body of empirical work measuring different types of cultural traits has shown that culture...
Some economists argue that institutions are the most important factor affecting variation in economi...
Traditionally, economics has regarded institutions, notably norms and regulations, as fixed or exoge...
Traditionally, economics has regarded institutions, notably norms and regulations, as fixed or exoge...
The purpose of this paper is to work toward developing evolutionary reasoning in the social sciences...
Some institutions appear to exhibit ‘pathologies’, which are most often analysed in functionalist te...
Cultural evolution requires the social transmission of information. For this reason, scholars have e...
Traditionally, economics has regarded institutions, notably norms and regulations, as fixed or exoge...
Theoretical description of institutions as social phenomena requires that their adequate model be co...
To explain emergent cultural phenomena, this paper argues, it is inevitable to understand the evolut...
Human social life is uniquely complex and diverse. Much of that complexity and diversity arises from...
Fully explaining organizational phenomena requires exploring not only "how" a phenomenon works i.e....
Our species has the peculiar ability to accumulate cultural innovations over multiple generations, a...
Development economics witnessed an ‘institutional turn’ from the 1990s onwards, with an increasing n...
A growing body of empirical work measuring different types of cultural traits has shown that culture...
Some economists argue that institutions are the most important factor affecting variation in economi...
Traditionally, economics has regarded institutions, notably norms and regulations, as fixed or exoge...
Traditionally, economics has regarded institutions, notably norms and regulations, as fixed or exoge...
The purpose of this paper is to work toward developing evolutionary reasoning in the social sciences...
Some institutions appear to exhibit ‘pathologies’, which are most often analysed in functionalist te...
Cultural evolution requires the social transmission of information. For this reason, scholars have e...
Traditionally, economics has regarded institutions, notably norms and regulations, as fixed or exoge...
Theoretical description of institutions as social phenomena requires that their adequate model be co...
To explain emergent cultural phenomena, this paper argues, it is inevitable to understand the evolut...
Human social life is uniquely complex and diverse. Much of that complexity and diversity arises from...
Fully explaining organizational phenomena requires exploring not only "how" a phenomenon works i.e....
Our species has the peculiar ability to accumulate cultural innovations over multiple generations, a...
Development economics witnessed an ‘institutional turn’ from the 1990s onwards, with an increasing n...
A growing body of empirical work measuring different types of cultural traits has shown that culture...