Published online: 24 June 2017This paper presents an experimental study on the relationship between other-regarding preferences, in-group bias and political participation. We conjecture that subjects who are more other-regarding and exhibit higher in-group bias are more likely to bear the costs of participating in group action. Using a participation game, we implement laboratory elections in which two groups compete for victory. We induce different levels of in-group bias across subjects in order to implement treatments in which the competing groups are either highly biased towards the own group vis-à-vis the other one or are characterized by low levels of such in-group bias. Our results show that, at the aggregate level, participation is h...
People tend to voluntarily sacrifice their own interests to reject unfair proposals, and this behavi...
People who belong to the same group often behave alike. Is this because people with similar preferen...
This paper analyzes collective decision making when individual preferences evolve through learning. ...
We experimentally study the relationship between other-regarding preferences, group identity and pol...
This paper reports the results of a series of experiments in which the voter turnout decision was an...
Individuals participating in a group conflict have different preferences, e.g., maximizing their own...
A number of authors have argued that group consciousness increases individuals ’ polit-ical particip...
Models of political participation have begun to incorporate actors who possess ‘‘social preferences....
Consider a parliamentary committee with an equal number of coalition and opposition members. The opp...
At every scale from small committees to national elections, voters face tradeoffs between self-inter...
Lecture delivered at the European University Institute in Florence on 14 March 2018A video interview...
Although theory suggests individuals are more willing to incur a personal cost to benefit ingroup me...
Abstract of associated article: We examine differences in behavior between subjects interacting with...
This paper experimentally investigates how individual preferences, through unrestricted deliberation...
This paper studies how group a±liation and intergroup bias may affect economic decision- making. Two...
People tend to voluntarily sacrifice their own interests to reject unfair proposals, and this behavi...
People who belong to the same group often behave alike. Is this because people with similar preferen...
This paper analyzes collective decision making when individual preferences evolve through learning. ...
We experimentally study the relationship between other-regarding preferences, group identity and pol...
This paper reports the results of a series of experiments in which the voter turnout decision was an...
Individuals participating in a group conflict have different preferences, e.g., maximizing their own...
A number of authors have argued that group consciousness increases individuals ’ polit-ical particip...
Models of political participation have begun to incorporate actors who possess ‘‘social preferences....
Consider a parliamentary committee with an equal number of coalition and opposition members. The opp...
At every scale from small committees to national elections, voters face tradeoffs between self-inter...
Lecture delivered at the European University Institute in Florence on 14 March 2018A video interview...
Although theory suggests individuals are more willing to incur a personal cost to benefit ingroup me...
Abstract of associated article: We examine differences in behavior between subjects interacting with...
This paper experimentally investigates how individual preferences, through unrestricted deliberation...
This paper studies how group a±liation and intergroup bias may affect economic decision- making. Two...
People tend to voluntarily sacrifice their own interests to reject unfair proposals, and this behavi...
People who belong to the same group often behave alike. Is this because people with similar preferen...
This paper analyzes collective decision making when individual preferences evolve through learning. ...