@inbook{2513098fcbc049a7baa70dacbed912e8,
title = "IDEOLOGY, RELIGION, AND THE EVOLUTION OF COOPERATION: FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON ISRAELI KIBBUTZIM",
abstract = "Despite the putative importance of ideological commitments in the evolution of large-scale cooperation among unrelated individuals, evolutionary researchers have yet to examine empirically the relationship between ideology and cooperation. We conduct an experimental game on Israeli kibbutz members to evaluate whether: (1) differences in ideological commitment can explain variation in cooperation within and across kibbutzim; and (2) whether certain types of ideologies are better at promoting cooperation than others. We use the cooperative behavior of Israeli city residents as a baseline and show that members of collectivized kibbutzim are more cooperative than city residents, while members of kibbutzim that have abandoned socialist ideology (privatized kibbutzim) are no more cooperative than city residents. Our results further indicate that among collectivized kibbutzim, members of religious kibbutzim are more cooperative than their secular counterparts. Religious males who engage in thrice-daily communal prayer display the highest levels of cooperation of any subpopulation in our sample. We discuss how the performance of sanctified rituals serves to internalize religious ideological commitment, thus enhancing the ability of religious ideology to motivate cooperative behavior.",
author = "Richard Sosis and Ruffle, {Bradley J.}",
note = "Funding Information: We thank Candace Alcorta, Mike Alvard, Sharon Feldstein, Brian Pacciotti, and an anonymous reviewer for valuable comments. Our team of experimenters deserves special thanks: David Amar, Yifat Arbeli, Guy Attias, Inbar Avraham, Revital Chapani, Moti Dahan, Gil Eichholz, Sarit Fhima, Hagit Gilad, Tsahi Hasday, Avi Levy, Gidi Maor, Ronen Matmon, Hila Moshkovits, Limor Polak, Tata Pyatigorsky-Ruffle, Ze{\textquoteright}ev Shtudiner, Amihai Toledano, Tsila Vigder-Keynan, and Limor Zahavi. We also thank each of the kibbutz movements for their cooperation and for agreeing to provide economic data and Shlomo Getz for supplying timely data on privatization. Funding for this project was provided by the U.S.-Israel Binational Science Foundation, the Pinhas Sapir Center for Development, the Ushi Friedman Foundation, and the University of Connecticut. This paper was written while Ruffle was a research fellow at the Harvard Business School. ",
year = "2004",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/S0190-1281(04)23004-9",
language = "English",
isbn = "0762310820",
series = "Research in Economic Anthropology",
publisher = "JAI Press",
pages = "89--117",
booktitle = "Socioeconomic Aspects of Human Behavioral Ecology",
address = "United States",
}