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Crime-related exposure to violence and prosocial behavior: experimental evidence from Colombia

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    0572636 - NHU-C 2024 RIV NL eng J - Journal Article
    Bogliacino, F. - Gómez, Camilo - Grimalda, G.
    Crime-related exposure to violence and prosocial behavior: experimental evidence from Colombia.
    Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics. Roč. 104, June (2023), č. článku 102023. ISSN 2214-8043. E-ISSN 2214-8051
    Institutional support: Cooperatio-COOP
    Keywords : violence * urban crime * economic losses
    OECD category: Applied Economics, Econometrics
    Impact factor: 1.6, year: 2022
    Method of publishing: Limited access
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socec.2023.102023

    Victims of violence appear hypersensitive to cues and their brain reacts to triggers as if the past events were happening in the present. We assess to what extent recalling these negative experiences increases prosociality. We conduct two artefactual field experiments in Bogotá (Colombia) to test this hypothesis. Our methodological strategy is to experimentally manipulate the recall of violence, either through a direct question or through a monetary loss in participants’ experimental endowment. We interact these treatments with the degree of exposure to violence. We find that victims recalling experiences of urban violence act more prosocially in terms of trust, trustworthiness, and cooperation. The increase in prosociality favors residents in the same city district as the participant (ingroup bias). However, the ingroup bias holds in trust decisions but not in cooperation games decisions.
    Permanent Link: https://hdl.handle.net/11104/0343235


    Research data: OSFHOME
     
     
Number of the records: 1  

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