THE TIMES THEY ARE A CHANGIN':
The effect of institutions on behavior,
cooperation, emotional attachment and
sentiment at 26,000ft
By David A. Savage, Benno Torgler
CREMA - Center for Research in Economics, Management and the Arts, 2013
Abstract
This paper attempts to determine if the introduction of a competing social
institution has had a significant effect and shifted the pro-social behavior
in the extreme (life-and-death) environment of mountaineering in the Himalayan
Mountains over the last sixty years. We apply an analytic narratives
approach to empirically investigate the link between death, success
and the introduced social institution (commercialization). We use the Hawley
and Salisbury (2007) Himalayan Database to determine if the introduction
of this social institution is responsible for the decline in pro-social and
altruistic behaviors. The results show that the change helping behavior is
strongly correlated with the on mass introduction of commercialization. The
results show a weakening of the prosocial behavior in the more “traditional
climbers” in the modern period, created by a crowding out effect, which may
have lead to the break down in prosocial behavior and the rise of anti-social
behavior. Additionally, the results indicate that the prosocial behavior of
the non-commercial groups in recent times may in fact be driven by the
behavior of the Sherpa and not that of the climbers.
The study may be accessed at Savage-Torgler-CREMA [0.5kb Pdf].
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