
This paper provides strong evidence supporting the long-standing speculation that decisionmaking in groups has a dark side, by magnifying the prevalence of anti-social behavior towards outsiders. A large-scale experiment implemented in Slovakia and Uganda (N=2,309) reveals that deciding in a group with randomly assigned peers increases the prevalence of anti-social behavior that reduces everyone’s payoff but which improves the relative position of own group. The effects are driven by the influence of a group context on individual behavior, rather than by group deliberation. The observed patterns are strikingly similar on both continents.
ddc:330, group conflict, aggressive competitiveness, C93, antisocial behavior, group membership, group decision-making, C92, D91, D01, D74, D64
ddc:330, group conflict, aggressive competitiveness, C93, antisocial behavior, group membership, group decision-making, C92, D91, D01, D74, D64
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