Selfish punishers. An experimental investigation of designated punishment behavior in public goods
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1782296
DOI10.1016/J.ECONLET.2017.05.022zbMATH Open1396.91191OpenAlexW2619858856MaRDI QIDQ1782296FDOQ1782296
Authors: Leonard Hoeft, Wladislaw Mill
Publication date: 20 September 2018
Published in: Economics Letters (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.econlet.2017.05.022
Recommendations
- A comparative statics analysis of punishment in public-good experiments
- Feedback, punishment and cooperation in public good experiments
- Self-governance in generalized exchange. A laboratory experiment on the structural embeddedness of peer punishment
- Punishment, counterpunishment and sanction enforcement in a social dilemma experiment
- Learning to punish: Experimental evidence from a sequential step-level public goods game
- Combined effect of pure punishment and reward in the public goods game
- Punishment, inequality, and welfare: a public good experiment
- Punishment strategies in repeated games: evidence from experimental markets
Cites Work
Cited In (20)
- Selfish punishment: altruism can be maintained by competition among cheaters
- Fairness, spite, and intentions: testing different motives behind punishment in a prisoners' dilemma game
- Punishment, inequality, and welfare: a public good experiment
- Anger management: aggression and punishment in the provision of public goods
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Do non-strategic sanctions obey the law of demand? The demand for punishment in the voluntary contribution mechanism
- Learning to punish: Experimental evidence from a sequential step-level public goods game
- Teams do inflict costly third-party punishment as individuals do: experimental evidence
- Acts of helping and harming
- Inequality aversion and antisocial punishment
- Conditional punishment
- Selfish punishment with avoiding mechanism can alleviate both first-order and second-order social dilemma
- McCockerel measuring individual punishment and reciprocity in a simple value-laden dilemma game
- A comparative statics analysis of punishment in public-good experiments
- Do economists punish less?
- When punishers might be loved: fourth-party choices and third-party punishment in a delegation game
- The motive matters: experimental evidence on the expressive function of punishment
- Punishing free-riders: How group size affects mutual monitoring and the provision of public goods
- Profit-seeking punishment corrupts norm obedience
- Alleviation and sanctions in social dilemma games
Uses Software
This page was built for publication: Selfish punishers. An experimental investigation of designated punishment behavior in public goods
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q1782296)