2020
DOI: 10.1111/ecin.12917
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An Experimental Study of Kin and Ethnic Favoritism

Abstract: Ethnic and kinship ties have long been viewed as potential catalysts for favoritism, and hence corruption. In experiments conducted in three countries, we recruit siblings, coethnics and strangers and vary the relationship(s) between the players of a game to observe how kin and ethnic ties influence the willingness of two players to benefit one another at the expense of a third party. We see universal sibling favoritism, but ethnic favoritism, and favoritism toward other in‐group members (friends) varies. We a… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Worryingly, perceived closeness showed strong congruency effects. Psychological closeness is a strong predictor in future dishonest behavior such that close others behaving dishonestly create strong pulls to behave dishonestly oneself (Akbari et al, 2020;Irlenbusch et al, 2020;Moore & Gino, 2013), and psychologically close people, including leaders, face less criticism in face of ethical violations (Tumasjan et al, 2010;Weidman et al, 2020). Our study provides evidence that being a "partner in crime" might over time lead to a self-reinforcing cycle of increasing dishonesty.…”
Section: Theoretical Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 69%
“…Worryingly, perceived closeness showed strong congruency effects. Psychological closeness is a strong predictor in future dishonest behavior such that close others behaving dishonestly create strong pulls to behave dishonestly oneself (Akbari et al, 2020;Irlenbusch et al, 2020;Moore & Gino, 2013), and psychologically close people, including leaders, face less criticism in face of ethical violations (Tumasjan et al, 2010;Weidman et al, 2020). Our study provides evidence that being a "partner in crime" might over time lead to a self-reinforcing cycle of increasing dishonesty.…”
Section: Theoretical Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 69%
“…Although studies of global psychological variation rarely focus specifically on Muslims, they necessarily collect extensive data on Muslim populations. Moreover, rising interest in psychological variation has encouraged psychological research on certain Muslim countries, such as Turkey, Iran, and Pakistan (see e.g., Akbari et al, 2020;Atari, Chaudhary & Al-Shawaf, 2020;Atari, Graham & Dehghani, 2020;Chaudhary et al, 2018;Khallad, 2005;Yalçındağ et al, 2019;Yilmaz & Saribay, 2018;Yilmaz et al, 2020). Technical psychological research is also complemented by general statistical surveys on the global Muslim population and its views regarding religion and morality (Esposito & Mogahed, 2007;Pew Research Center, 2011, 2017b.…”
Section: Islamic Studies and Psychological Statisticsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They also rely heavily on regression analysis, and seek to answer questions of the following type: "When the percentage of citizens who believe in God increases by one point, what is the quantitative impact on the country's economic growth rate (or homicide rate or patents per capita)?," "When citizens' average time in school increases by a year, what is the quantitative impact on the country's fertility rate (or on citizens' level of happiness; or on the percentage of the population that believes in God; or on the percentage of the population that believes care for kin is an important value)?" (See e.g., Akbari et al, 2020;Alesina & Giuliano, 2014;Barro & McCleary, 2003;Becker, 2019;Berkessel et al, 2021;Bénabou et al, 2018;Carvalho et al, 2019;Darnell & Sherkat, 1997;Easterlin et al, 2010;Iannaccone, 1994;Inglehart, 2018;Iyer, 2015;Lee & Lee, 2016;Lehrer, 2008;McCleary, 2011;McCleary & Barro, 2006;Rindermann, 2018;Shariff & Rhemtulla, 2012;Thomson et al, 2018). Such interdisciplinary research has (arguably) been spearheaded by economists (e.g., behavioral economics, economics of religion), but has also attracted political scientists, psychologists, sociologists, as well as quantitative-minded anthropologists and historians.…”
Section: Islamic Studies and Socioeconomic Statisticsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Kin favoritism is a common type of injustice that arises from people's preferences to favor members of their own extended family at the expense of injustice to outsiders. Such favoritism is especially prevalent in societies that have large close-knit family groups and strong family ties, such as Iran (Akbari et al, 2020). Thus, we focus on kin favoritism to investigate individuals' perceived threat of injustice.…”
Section: Bjw Trust In Justice and The Differentiation Of Gbjw And Pbjwmentioning
confidence: 99%