Sacrifice is widely believed to enhance cooperation in churches, communes, gangs, clans, military units, and many other groups. We find that sacrifice can also work in the lab, apart from special ideologies, identities, or interactions. Our subjects play a modified VCM game—one in which they can voluntarily join groups that provide reduced rates of return on private investment. This leads to both endogenous sorting (because free-riders tend to reject the reduced-rate option) and substitution (because reduced private productivity favours increased club involvement). Seemingly unproductive costs thus serve to screen out free-riders, attract conditional cooperators, boost club production, and increase member welfare. The sacrifice mechanism is...
We examine why heterogenous communities may fail to provide public goods. Current work characterizes...
Does the desirability of social institutions for public goods provision depend on the extent to whic...
vii, 95 p. : ill. A print copy of this title is available through the UO Libraries under the call n...
Sacrifice is widely believed to enhance cooperation in churches, communes, gangs, clans, military un...
How and why do groups form? In many cases, group formation is endogenous to the actions that individ...
We test a mechanism whereby groups are formed endogenously, through the use of voting. Once formed, ...
When groups compete for resources, some groups will be more successful than others, forcing out less...
We examine theoretically and experimentally how competitive contribution-based group formation affec...
Cooperative behaviors within a group face the risk of being exploited by `free-riders,' individuals ...
Cooperative behaviors within a group face the risk of being exploited by `free-riders,' individuals ...
What makes people cooperate? How can one design mechanisms in order to incentivize players to contri...
We study endogenous group formation in tournaments employing experimental three-player contests. We ...
Religion and ritual have been characterized as costly ways for conditional cooperators to signal the...
We study endogenous group formation in tournaments employing experimental three-player contests. We ...
We analyze an experimental public goods game in which group members can endogenously determine wheth...
We examine why heterogenous communities may fail to provide public goods. Current work characterizes...
Does the desirability of social institutions for public goods provision depend on the extent to whic...
vii, 95 p. : ill. A print copy of this title is available through the UO Libraries under the call n...
Sacrifice is widely believed to enhance cooperation in churches, communes, gangs, clans, military un...
How and why do groups form? In many cases, group formation is endogenous to the actions that individ...
We test a mechanism whereby groups are formed endogenously, through the use of voting. Once formed, ...
When groups compete for resources, some groups will be more successful than others, forcing out less...
We examine theoretically and experimentally how competitive contribution-based group formation affec...
Cooperative behaviors within a group face the risk of being exploited by `free-riders,' individuals ...
Cooperative behaviors within a group face the risk of being exploited by `free-riders,' individuals ...
What makes people cooperate? How can one design mechanisms in order to incentivize players to contri...
We study endogenous group formation in tournaments employing experimental three-player contests. We ...
Religion and ritual have been characterized as costly ways for conditional cooperators to signal the...
We study endogenous group formation in tournaments employing experimental three-player contests. We ...
We analyze an experimental public goods game in which group members can endogenously determine wheth...
We examine why heterogenous communities may fail to provide public goods. Current work characterizes...
Does the desirability of social institutions for public goods provision depend on the extent to whic...
vii, 95 p. : ill. A print copy of this title is available through the UO Libraries under the call n...