Using a carefully designed series of public goods games, we compare, across monogamous and polygynous households, the willingness of husbands and wives to cooperate to maximize household gains. Compared to monogamous husbands and wives, polygynous husbands and wives are less cooperative, one with another, and co-wives are least cooperative, one with another. The husbands’ and wives’ behavior in a corresponding series of inter-household games indicates that these differences cannot be attributed to selection of less cooperative people into polygyny. Finally, behavior in polygynous households is more reciprocal and less apparently altruistic
A new set of codes is offered to begin to unpack the dimensions of polygyny. Included are measures o...
In this paper we present results from an economic experiment with 100 co-habiting couples, to invest...
In recent years economists have increasingly sought to explain interaction between family members, o...
Using a carefully designed series of public goods games, we compare, across monogamous and polygynou...
Altruism towards others can inhibit cooperation by increasing the utility players expect to receive ...
goods, and repeated interactions help facili-tate the efficient allocation of resources. Yet many pa...
Competition and cooperation in polygynous households have both been widely documented across various...
Using samples of polygamous and non-polygamous households from villages in rural areas south of Kano...
Models of household economics require an understanding of economic interactions in families. Social ...
This study makes a significant contribution to investigations of household behavior by testing for a...
Using a laboratory experiment, we collected data on dictator giving among student strangers and marr...
Decision-making structures may be different across polygynous and monogamous households, leading to ...
In this paper we present results from an economic experiment with 100 co-habiting couples, to invest...
Conventional wisdom holds that the polygynous family system is as sexually and emotionally satisfyin...
A new set of codes is offered to begin to unpack the dimensions of polygyny. Included are measures o...
In this paper we present results from an economic experiment with 100 co-habiting couples, to invest...
In recent years economists have increasingly sought to explain interaction between family members, o...
Using a carefully designed series of public goods games, we compare, across monogamous and polygynou...
Altruism towards others can inhibit cooperation by increasing the utility players expect to receive ...
goods, and repeated interactions help facili-tate the efficient allocation of resources. Yet many pa...
Competition and cooperation in polygynous households have both been widely documented across various...
Using samples of polygamous and non-polygamous households from villages in rural areas south of Kano...
Models of household economics require an understanding of economic interactions in families. Social ...
This study makes a significant contribution to investigations of household behavior by testing for a...
Using a laboratory experiment, we collected data on dictator giving among student strangers and marr...
Decision-making structures may be different across polygynous and monogamous households, leading to ...
In this paper we present results from an economic experiment with 100 co-habiting couples, to invest...
Conventional wisdom holds that the polygynous family system is as sexually and emotionally satisfyin...
A new set of codes is offered to begin to unpack the dimensions of polygyny. Included are measures o...
In this paper we present results from an economic experiment with 100 co-habiting couples, to invest...
In recent years economists have increasingly sought to explain interaction between family members, o...