Parochial Versus Universal Cooperation: Introducing a Novel Economic Game of Within- and Between-Group Interaction
| Authors |
|
|---|---|
| Publication date | 01-2020 |
| Journal | Social Psychological and Personality Science |
| Volume | Issue number | 11 | 1 |
| Pages (from-to) | 36-45 |
| Number of pages | 10 |
| Organisations |
|
| Abstract |
Engaging in personally costly within-group cooperation benefits one’s in-group members but also impacts other groups by benefiting, neglecting, or harming out-group members, leading to a range of potential consequences for between-group relations (e.g., collaboration vs. competition). We introduce the Intergroup Parochial and Universal Cooperation (IPUC) game to investigate the prevalence of the individual preferences underlying these different expressions of within-group cooperation: universalism, weak parochialism, and strong parochialism. In two online experiments with natural groups, we show that the IPUC has value beyond existing economic games in measuring these preferences separately. In a third experiment conducted in the lab, we show how dispositional measures traditionally associated with within- and between-group cooperation, that is, social value orientation, social dominance orientation, honesty-humility, and empathic concern, predict different preferences. Thus, the IPUC provides a tool to better understand within- and between-group interactions and to test interventions to overcome intergroup conflict.
|
| Document type | Article |
| Note | With supplementary file |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1177/1948550619841627 |
| Downloads |
Parochial vs Universal Cooperation
(Final published version)
|
| Supplementary materials | |
| Permalink to this page | |