除非我死:讨价还价与尊严的代价

Over My Dead Body: Bargaining and the Price of Dignity

American Economic Review · 2009
被引 73
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

探讨自尊、尊严和希望如何导致个人和群体拒绝合理提议、推卸责任或逃避现实,从而引发代价高昂的僵局和冲突,如审判、离婚、罢工和战争。

Abstract

Concerns of pride, dignity, and the desire to keep hope about future options often lead individuals and groups to walk away from rea sonable offers, try to shift blame for failure onto others or take refuge in political utopias. Costly impasses and conflicts result, such as trials, divorces, strikes, the scapegoating of minorities for economic hardships, and wars. A key and puzzling aspect of these processes is the role played by wishful rationalizations and delusions, as attested by field observers (e.g., Truman F. Bewley (1999) in the context of labor relations; Kevin Woods, James Lacey, and Williamson Murray (2006) in that of war), as well as controlled experiments. Leigh Thompson and George Loewenstein (1992) and Linda C. Babcock et al. (1995) thus demonstrate how subjects in bargaining situations with common knowledge spontaneously generate, through self-serving processing and recall of the same evidence, divergent beliefs about the fairness of their cause and wishful predictions of outcomes, and how these are associated to costly delays and disagreements.

尊严讨价还价一厢情愿冲突