Culture, Social Norms and Economics

Hardback

Culture, Social Norms and Economics

9781858986173 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by Mark Casson, Professor of Economics and Director, Centre for Economic Institutions and Business History, University of Reading, UK
Publication Date: 1997 ISBN: 978 1 85898 617 3 Extent: 1,224 pp
Economists have often been accused of failing to take full account of culture and social norms in their explanations of human behaviour. Cultural factors are playing an increasingly important role in economic theorizing and are achieving greater recognition as determinants of economic performance. As such these volumes will be a landmark and will provide easy access to the most important articles in this expanding field.

Copyright & permissions

Recommend to librarian

Your Details

Privacy Policy

Librarian Details

Download leaflet

Print page

More Information
Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
More Information
Economists have often been accused of failing to take full account of culture and social norms in their explanations of human behaviour. Cultural factors are playing an increasingly important role in economic theorizing and are achieving greater recognition as determinants of economic performance. As such these volumes will be a landmark and will provide easy access to the most important articles in this expanding field.

The first volume focuses on modelling the social and cultural aspects of an individual’s behaviour. In the second volume this theme develops to consider cooperation in the economic system and the role of culture in supporting this system.

The articles in these volumes explore a diverse range of issues including:

• the differences in achievements between ethnic groups
• the differences between firms from different countries
• the links between religion, community, ethnicity and economic performance.
• the influences of leadership, peer pressure, entrepreneurship, envy, status-seeking and self esteem.
Critical Acclaim
‘The two volumes are a welcome source for all interested in the rather successful but somewhat limited and sometimes problematic rational choice approach usually applied by economists (and since some time also by political scientists, sociologists and legal scholars). The reader will find many until now widely dispersed articles, which not only address the application of this method to other subjects than the market economy, but also its shortcomings, and which try to rectify them by widening or transforming it. Thus the two volumes can be strongly recommended. . .’
– Peter Bernholz, Kyklos
Contributors
54 articles, dating from 1907 to 1995
Contributors include: G. Akerlof, J. Buchanan, R. Ekelund, R. Frank, F. Knight
Contents
Contents: Volume I: Economic Behaviour Part I: Introduction Part II: Altruism, Envy and Interdependent References Part III: Social Aspects of Preferences: Rank and Status Part IV: Passions and Self-Control • Volume II: Economic Perfornance Part I: Co-operation Part II: Social Order Without Law Part III: Leadership and Peer Pressure Part IV: Religion and the Nature of Belief Part V: Entrepreneurial Culture Part VI: National Culture and Economic Perfornance Name Index
My Cart