Costly Punishment Across Human Societies

Author:

Henrich Joseph12345,McElreath Richard12345,Barr Abigail12345,Ensminger Jean12345,Barrett Clark12345,Bolyanatz Alexander12345,Cardenas Juan Camilo12345,Gurven Michael12345,Gwako Edwins12345,Henrich Natalie12345,Lesorogol Carolyn12345,Marlowe Frank12345,Tracer David12345,Ziker John12345

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology, Emory University, 1557 Dickey Drive, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.

2. Department of Anthropology, Graduate Group in Ecology, Animal Behavior Graduate Group, Population Biology Graduate Group, University of California Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA.

3. GPRG, Department of Economics, University of Oxford, Manor Road, Oxford, OX1 3UQ, UK.

4. Division of the Humanities and Social Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA.

5. Department of Anthropology, UCLA, 341 Haines Hall, Box 951553, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.

Abstract

Recent behavioral experiments aimed at understanding the evolutionary foundations of human cooperation have suggested that a willingness to engage in costly punishment, even in one-shot situations, may be part of human psychology and a key element in understanding our sociality. However, because most experiments have been confined to students in industrialized societies, generalizations of these insights to the species have necessarily been tentative. Here, experimental results from 15 diverse populations show that (i) all populations demonstrate some willingness to administer costly punishment as unequal behavior increases, (ii) the magnitude of this punishment varies substantially across populations, and (iii) costly punishment positively covaries with altruistic behavior across populations. These findings are consistent with models of the gene-culture coevolution of human altruism and further sharpen what any theory of human cooperation needs to explain.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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