This paper presents an economic analysis of religious behavior that accounts for the continuing success of groups with strange requirements and seemingly inefficient prohibitions. The analysis does not presuppose any special motives for religious activity. Rather, religion is modeled as a club good that displays positive returns to "participatory crowding." The analysis demonstrates that efficient religions with perfectly rational members may benefit from stigma, self-sacrifice, and bizarre behavioral restrictions. The model also addresses sacrifice in nonreligious "social clubs": fraternities, communes, political parties, work groups, and families. Copyright 1992 by University of Chicago Press.
We analyze how religion affects voting and redistribution. Our model directs attention away from the...
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In recent years rational choice approaches have increasingly been employed in the sociological study...
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As Weber (1904) recognized, Calvinistic beliefs about predestination - perhaps counter-intuitively- ...
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We analyze how religion affects voting and redistribution. Our model directs attention away from the...
In recent years rational choice approaches have increasingly been employed in the sociological study...
This paper provides a theoretical discussion on what analytical insight is gained by viewing religio...
In this paper I explore the psychology of ritual performance and present a simple graphical model th...
We analyze the relation between religious beliefs, religious participation, and social cooperation. ...
Either despite or because of their non-traditional approach, megachurches have grown significantly i...
As club goods, religions face the problem of free riding. Smaller religious clubs, such as cults or ...
As club goods, religions face the problem of free riding. Smaller religious clubs, such as cults or ...
Religious individuals commonly make sizable monetary sacrifices by contributing to their congregatio...
In this paper we o¤er a new theory of religious organizations. Our theory links between two importan...
We propose a model of religious organizations which relies on the ability of such organizations and ...
In recent years rational choice approaches have increasingly been employed in the sociological study...
We propose a model of religious organizations which relies on the ability of such organizations to a...
As Weber (1904) recognized, Calvinistic beliefs about predestination - perhaps counter-intuitively- ...
This chapter analyses some phenomena in organized religion from the point of view of economics. It i...
We analyze how religion affects voting and redistribution. Our model directs attention away from the...
In recent years rational choice approaches have increasingly been employed in the sociological study...
This paper provides a theoretical discussion on what analytical insight is gained by viewing religio...