As club goods, religions face the problem of free riding. Smaller religious clubs, such as cults or sects, can often surmount this problem through communal pressures or by requiring their members to provide easily monitored signals. Generally, however, such tactics will be unavailable or too costly for large denominations, and, as such, these denominations must look for other techniques to avoid free riding. This paper argues that the Roman Catholic doctrine of justification by faith and works serves as an Olsonian selective incentive, and presents empirical evidence in support of this claim. Specifically, I show that Catholics contribute significantly more to their churches as they approach death than do members of Protestant denominations...
This article provides experimental support for the hypothesis that insurance can be a motive for rel...
Either despite or because of their non-traditional approach, megachurches have grown significantly i...
Suicide has remained a persistent social phenomenon and now accounts for more deaths than motor vehi...
As club goods, religions face the problem of free riding. Smaller religious clubs, such as cults or ...
This paper presents an economic analysis of religious behavior that accounts for the continuing succ...
A large body of research has investigated the effects of religion on individual behavior and, more r...
The present study sheds light on the contentious relation between religions and prosociality by comp...
Using a stochastic dominance approach in an international dataset of about 10,000 Catholic subjects,...
As Weber (1904) recognized, Calvinistic beliefs about predestination - perhaps counter-intuitively- ...
In this paper I explore the psychology of ritual performance and present a simple graphical model th...
Economic actions are determined by a variety of social and cultural influences. Unlike the ideal rat...
Using data from a field experiment on incentives for private delivery of socially beneficial goods a...
This project explored church members\u27 willingness to use religious resources to overcome a gambli...
Religious individuals commonly make sizable monetary sacrifices by contributing to their congregatio...
We examine empirical evidence for religious prosociality, the hypothesis that religions facilitate c...
This article provides experimental support for the hypothesis that insurance can be a motive for rel...
Either despite or because of their non-traditional approach, megachurches have grown significantly i...
Suicide has remained a persistent social phenomenon and now accounts for more deaths than motor vehi...
As club goods, religions face the problem of free riding. Smaller religious clubs, such as cults or ...
This paper presents an economic analysis of religious behavior that accounts for the continuing succ...
A large body of research has investigated the effects of religion on individual behavior and, more r...
The present study sheds light on the contentious relation between religions and prosociality by comp...
Using a stochastic dominance approach in an international dataset of about 10,000 Catholic subjects,...
As Weber (1904) recognized, Calvinistic beliefs about predestination - perhaps counter-intuitively- ...
In this paper I explore the psychology of ritual performance and present a simple graphical model th...
Economic actions are determined by a variety of social and cultural influences. Unlike the ideal rat...
Using data from a field experiment on incentives for private delivery of socially beneficial goods a...
This project explored church members\u27 willingness to use religious resources to overcome a gambli...
Religious individuals commonly make sizable monetary sacrifices by contributing to their congregatio...
We examine empirical evidence for religious prosociality, the hypothesis that religions facilitate c...
This article provides experimental support for the hypothesis that insurance can be a motive for rel...
Either despite or because of their non-traditional approach, megachurches have grown significantly i...
Suicide has remained a persistent social phenomenon and now accounts for more deaths than motor vehi...