Antisocial Punishment Across Societies
University of Nottingham · University of St.Gallen · +1 more institution
Abstract
We document the widespread existence of antisocial punishment, that is, the sanctioning of people who behave prosocially. Our evidence comes from public goods experiments that we conducted in 16 comparable participant pools around the world. However, there is a huge cross-societal variation. Some participant pools punished the high contributors as much as they punished the low contributors, whereas in others people only punished low contributors. In some participant pools, antisocial punishment was strong enough to remove the cooperation-enhancing effect of punishment. We also show that weak norms of civic cooperation and the weakness of the rule of law in a country are significant predictors of antisocial…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 200.16
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
3- BHBenedikt Herrmann
University of Nottingham, University of St.Gallen, University of Applied Sciences St. Gallen
- CTChristian Thöni
University of Nottingham, University of St.Gallen, University of Applied Sciences St. Gallen
- SGSimon GächterCorresponding
University of Nottingham, University of St.Gallen, University of Applied Sciences St. Gallen
Topics & keywords
- Punishment (psychology)
- Criminology
- Public good
- Psychology
- Social psychology
- Public goods game
- Economics
- Microeconomics
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions