We identify Pakistani men’s willingness to pay to preserve their anti-American identity using two experiments imposing clearly specified financial costs on anti-American expression, with minimal consequential or social considerations. In two distinct studies, one-quarter to one-third of subjects forgo payments from the U.S. government worth around one-fifth of a day’s wage to avoid an identity-threatening choice: anonymously checking a box indicating gratitude toward the U.S. government. We find sensitivity to both payment size and anticipated social context: when subjects anticipate that rejection will be observable by others, rejection falls suggesting that, for some, social image can outweigh self-image
Motivated by symbolic ideology research and Social Identity Theory (SIT), this article introduces an...
In a post-9/11 world, Muslims and Muslim-looking individuals are perceived as a homogenous group cha...
This study examines support for ethnic profiling in the United States as a counterter-rorism tactic....
We identify Pakistani men’s willingness to pay to preserve their anti-American identity using two ex...
We identify Pakistani men’s willingness to pay to preserve their anti-American identity using two ex...
We develop an indirect, revealed preference method of eliciting political attitudes that over-comes ...
This paper adopts identity as a core concept. Following Akerlof and Kranton (2010), it demonstrates ...
Extending research on US ideological identity as a social identity, this study employs a social repr...
This paper reports the results of an economic experiment which was designed to test the effect of ra...
Several scholars have called upon social identity theory to investigate the relationship between an ...
Published as article in: Journal of Economic Methodology, 2010, vol. 17, issue 3, pages 261-275.This...
The face of the United States is changing. In a nation where the majority of the population belongs ...
This thesis consists of three chapters examining the effectsects of social identity in an experiment...
Even though U.S. foreign policy has gained considerable traction over the years in terms of a seriou...
This study inspects the perceptions of people about their identity as it relates to their country of...
Motivated by symbolic ideology research and Social Identity Theory (SIT), this article introduces an...
In a post-9/11 world, Muslims and Muslim-looking individuals are perceived as a homogenous group cha...
This study examines support for ethnic profiling in the United States as a counterter-rorism tactic....
We identify Pakistani men’s willingness to pay to preserve their anti-American identity using two ex...
We identify Pakistani men’s willingness to pay to preserve their anti-American identity using two ex...
We develop an indirect, revealed preference method of eliciting political attitudes that over-comes ...
This paper adopts identity as a core concept. Following Akerlof and Kranton (2010), it demonstrates ...
Extending research on US ideological identity as a social identity, this study employs a social repr...
This paper reports the results of an economic experiment which was designed to test the effect of ra...
Several scholars have called upon social identity theory to investigate the relationship between an ...
Published as article in: Journal of Economic Methodology, 2010, vol. 17, issue 3, pages 261-275.This...
The face of the United States is changing. In a nation where the majority of the population belongs ...
This thesis consists of three chapters examining the effectsects of social identity in an experiment...
Even though U.S. foreign policy has gained considerable traction over the years in terms of a seriou...
This study inspects the perceptions of people about their identity as it relates to their country of...
Motivated by symbolic ideology research and Social Identity Theory (SIT), this article introduces an...
In a post-9/11 world, Muslims and Muslim-looking individuals are perceived as a homogenous group cha...
This study examines support for ethnic profiling in the United States as a counterter-rorism tactic....