Case Study

Interpreting Cross-Cultural Punishment Behavior

A research team conducts an economic experiment in two distinct societies. In Society A, a small-scale community with low market integration and strong kinship ties, they observe that individuals rarely use their own resources to punish others for making unfair offers in a game. In Society B, a large community with high levels of market integration and frequent anonymous interactions, individuals frequently pay to punish unfair offers. Based on the general findings from large-scale, cross-cultural studies on costly punishment, what is the most likely explanation for the difference in behavior between these two societies?

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Updated 2025-08-14

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