This paper provides experimental evidence showing that members of a majority group systematically shift punishment on innocent members of an ethnic minority. We develop a new incentivized task, the Punishing the Scapegoat Game, to measure how injustice affecting a member of one’s own group shapes punishment of an unrelated bystander (“a scapegoat”). We manipulate the ethnic identity of the scapegoats and study interactions between the majority group and the Roma minority in Slovakia. We find that when no harm is done, there is no evidence of discrimination against the ethnic minority. In contrast, when a member of one’s own group is harmed, the punishment ”passed” on innocent individuals more than doubles when they are from the minority, as...
Groups that perceive themselves as victims can engage in “competitive victimhood”. We propose that, ...
Humans often punish non-cooperators in one-shot interactions among genetically-unrelated individuals...
Extant research hypothesizes that anger over past intergroup conflict serves as a catalyst for futur...
This paper provides experimental evidence showing that members of a majority group systematically sh...
Interethnic conflicts often escalate rapidly. Why does the behavior of masses easily change from coo...
People often displace their anger and aggression against innocent targets, sometimes called scapegoa...
Social norms pervade almost every aspect of social interaction. If they are violated, not only legal...
Third party punishment is crucial for sustaining cooperative behavior. Still, little is known about ...
Several everyday examples imply that humans reciprocate not only towards direct perpetrators, but al...
Because punishments are expected to give offenders what they deserve proportionally to the severity ...
This study considers the effects of ethnic violence on norms of fairness. Once violence is a foregon...
Because punishments are expected to give offenders what they deserve proportionally to the severity ...
Collective guilt is an aversive emotional reaction to ingroup blame that motivates corrective action...
ABSTRACT: Gypsies have been a persecuted minority for more than five centuries. Our paper examines h...
Humans often ‘altruistically’ punish non-cooperators in one-shot interactions among genetically unre...
Groups that perceive themselves as victims can engage in “competitive victimhood”. We propose that, ...
Humans often punish non-cooperators in one-shot interactions among genetically-unrelated individuals...
Extant research hypothesizes that anger over past intergroup conflict serves as a catalyst for futur...
This paper provides experimental evidence showing that members of a majority group systematically sh...
Interethnic conflicts often escalate rapidly. Why does the behavior of masses easily change from coo...
People often displace their anger and aggression against innocent targets, sometimes called scapegoa...
Social norms pervade almost every aspect of social interaction. If they are violated, not only legal...
Third party punishment is crucial for sustaining cooperative behavior. Still, little is known about ...
Several everyday examples imply that humans reciprocate not only towards direct perpetrators, but al...
Because punishments are expected to give offenders what they deserve proportionally to the severity ...
This study considers the effects of ethnic violence on norms of fairness. Once violence is a foregon...
Because punishments are expected to give offenders what they deserve proportionally to the severity ...
Collective guilt is an aversive emotional reaction to ingroup blame that motivates corrective action...
ABSTRACT: Gypsies have been a persecuted minority for more than five centuries. Our paper examines h...
Humans often ‘altruistically’ punish non-cooperators in one-shot interactions among genetically unre...
Groups that perceive themselves as victims can engage in “competitive victimhood”. We propose that, ...
Humans often punish non-cooperators in one-shot interactions among genetically-unrelated individuals...
Extant research hypothesizes that anger over past intergroup conflict serves as a catalyst for futur...