This paper explores an empirical puzzle: individuals in urban D.R. Congo who were unsure if they would be able to provide sufficient food for their families gave more of their money away to anonymous receivers in behavioral games. They were especially likely to share money evenly. We argue that this surprising prosocial behavior reflects sharing norms associated with informal insurance, for which more materially insecure individuals presumably have higher demand. We further argue that such sharing norms are sustained in urban Congo by Pentecostal churches, a nexus of risk-spreading in this context. The same group of highly insecure individuals is more likely to participate in public religious ceremonies—but not private ones—and to share mon...
The co-existence of Christian and indigenous “Kastom” belief systems on Tanna Island, Vanuatu provid...
Reputational considerations favour cooperation and thus we expect less cooperation in larger communi...
Job Market Paper We provide empirical evidence that an early form of “mobile money ” is used to tran...
We examine empirical evidence for religious prosociality, the hypothesis that religions facilitate c...
Current research suggests that certain features of religion can harness our sociality in important w...
This article provides experimental support for the hypothesis that insurance can be a motive for rel...
Are religious believers more prosocial than other people? In a trust game field experiment with 774 ...
Transfers between strangers, neighbors, families, and spouses were examined using Triple Dictator Ga...
This paper presents experimental evidence exploring how insurance might be a motive for religious do...
International audienceThis paper provides experimental support for the hypothesis that insurance can...
Transfers between strangers, neighbors, families, and spouses were examined using Triple Dictator Ga...
Humans’ willingness to bear costs to benefit others is an evolutionary puzzle. Cultural group select...
Reputational considerations favour cooperation and thus we expect less cooperation in larger communi...
232 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1986.This study examines the psych...
National audienceWe conducted an experimental study in Haiti testing for the relationship between re...
The co-existence of Christian and indigenous “Kastom” belief systems on Tanna Island, Vanuatu provid...
Reputational considerations favour cooperation and thus we expect less cooperation in larger communi...
Job Market Paper We provide empirical evidence that an early form of “mobile money ” is used to tran...
We examine empirical evidence for religious prosociality, the hypothesis that religions facilitate c...
Current research suggests that certain features of religion can harness our sociality in important w...
This article provides experimental support for the hypothesis that insurance can be a motive for rel...
Are religious believers more prosocial than other people? In a trust game field experiment with 774 ...
Transfers between strangers, neighbors, families, and spouses were examined using Triple Dictator Ga...
This paper presents experimental evidence exploring how insurance might be a motive for religious do...
International audienceThis paper provides experimental support for the hypothesis that insurance can...
Transfers between strangers, neighbors, families, and spouses were examined using Triple Dictator Ga...
Humans’ willingness to bear costs to benefit others is an evolutionary puzzle. Cultural group select...
Reputational considerations favour cooperation and thus we expect less cooperation in larger communi...
232 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1986.This study examines the psych...
National audienceWe conducted an experimental study in Haiti testing for the relationship between re...
The co-existence of Christian and indigenous “Kastom” belief systems on Tanna Island, Vanuatu provid...
Reputational considerations favour cooperation and thus we expect less cooperation in larger communi...
Job Market Paper We provide empirical evidence that an early form of “mobile money ” is used to tran...