违法如何帮你找到工作:来自电子舞曲社区的证据

When Breaking the Law Gets You the Job: Evidence from the Electronic Dance Music Community

ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCE QUARTERLY · 2025
被引 3
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究电子舞曲社区中,非法混音(bootlegging)如何被视为无私行为,反而增加艺人获得演出机会,揭示了违法者因服务社区而获得支持的悖论。

Abstract

Why would a law-abiding occupational community support members engaged in legally prohibited actions? We propose that lawbreaking can elicit informal support when it is construed as a disinterested action—intended to serve the community rather than the perpetrator. We study how illegal remixing (“bootlegging”) affects an artist’s ability to secure opening act and other performance opportunities in the electronic dance music (EDM) community, whose members endorse the substance of copyright law but whose norms about bootlegging are ambiguous. Data on 38,784 disc jockeys (DJs) across 97 countries over 10 years reveal that producing bootlegs is associated with more opportunities to perform, compared to producing official remixes or original music. This effect disappears when community members view bootlegging as a self-serving action—primarily designed to benefit the perpetrator. An online experiment and an expert survey rule out the possibility that bootlegs are considered more creative, of higher quality, or better able to attract attention. We shed additional light on our proposed mechanism by analyzing data from 34 interviews with EDM professionals. This helps us to explain how a lawbreaker can paradoxically be perceived as serving the community, thereby eliciting active community support for their action.

组织行为社会规范版权法电子音乐