Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
The problem of cooperation and social order is one of the core issues in the social sciences. The key question is how humans, groups, institutions, and countries can avoid or overcome the collective good dilemmas that could lead to a Hobbesian war of all against all. Using the general set of social dilemmas as a paradigmatic example, rigorous formal analysis can stimulate scientific progress in several ways.
The book, consisting of original articles, provides state of the art examples of research along these lines: theoretical, experimental, and field studies on trust and cooperation. The theoretical work covers articles on trust and control, reputation formation, and paradigmatic articles on the benefits and caveats of abstracting reality into models. The experimental articles treat lab based tests of models of trust and reputation, and the effects of the social and institutional embeddedness on behavior in cooperative interactions and possibly emerging inequalities. The field studies test these models in applied settings such as cooperation between organizations, informal care, and different kinds of collaboration networks.
The book will be exemplary for rigorous sociology and social sciences more in general in a variety of ways:
- There is a focus on effects of social conditions, in particular different forms of social and institutional embeddedness, on social outcomes. Theorizing about and testing of effects of social contexts on individual and group outcomes is one of the main aims of sociological research.
- Modelling efforts include formal explications of micro-macro links that are typically easily overlooked when argumentation is intuitive and impressionistic
- Extensive attention is paid to unintended effects of intentional behavior, another feature that is a direct consequence of formal theoretical modelling and in-depth data-analyses of the social processes.
- By combining different empirical methods on the same questions, essentially the book sets forth a mixed-method design across chapters, allowing for a more convincing body of evidence per underlying question
- Some theoretical contributions re-evaluate what has been learned from the experimental and field results about the strengths and weaknesses of the earlier theoretical propositions, and extend the theory in light of these findings.
Synopsis
The problem of cooperation is one of the core issues in sociology and social science
more in general. The key question is how humans, groups, organizations, institutions,
and countries can avoid or overcome the collective good dilemmas that could lead to a
Hobbesian war of all against all.
The chapters in this book provide state of the art examples of research on this crucial
topic. These include theoretical, laboratory, and field studies on trust and cooperation,
thereby approaching the issue in three complementary and synergetic ways. The
theoretical work covers articles on trust and control, reputation formation, and
paradigmatic articles on the benefits and caveats of abstracting reality into models.
The laboratory studies test the implications of different models of trust and reputation,
such as the effects of social and institutional embeddedness and the potentially
emerging inequalities this may cause. The field studies test these implications in
applied settings such as business purchasing and supply, informal care, and different
kinds of collaboration networks.
This book is exemplary for rigorous social science. The focus is on effects of social
conditions, in particular different forms of social and institutional embeddedness,
on social outcomes at the macro level. Modelling efforts are applied to connect social
conditions to social outcomes through micro-level behavior in ways that are easily
overlooked when argumentation is intuitive and impressionistic. The book sets forth
a mixed-method approach by applying different empirical methods to test hypotheses
about similar questions. Several contributions re-evaluate the theoretical strengths and
weaknesses following from the laboratory and field studies. Improving the theory in
light of these findings facilitates pushing the boundaries of social science .