Social Dilemmas: Perspectives on Individuals and Groups
By (Author) David A. Schroeder
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
24th January 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Sociology and anthropology
302.3
Hardback
240
Efficient resource management and provision of public goods represent social dilemmas for those involved. They must choose between a course of action that would be in their personal best interest (e.g., overharvesting fishing banks to take a bigger profit; withholding one's contributions to National Public Radio) and some alternative course that would be more advantageous for the community as a whole (e.g., limiting one's present catch to ensure future fishing stocks; contributing to NPR, even though contributors and noncontributors alike would be able to enjoy its programming). The decisions made by those facing social dilemmas are affected by many factors, and the contributors to this book have explored the diverse processes that ultimately lead an individual to choose between self-interest and the well-being of the community. By gaining a better appreciation of the variables that affect decisions made by those caught in social dilemmas, more effective ways to encourage greater cooperation and to promote the common good may be found.
This book is likely to be most useful to those seeking an introduction to the concepts and methods of social dilemmas research through the late 1980s....I believe that the editor has succeeded in assembling in one place a collection of essays that fit well with the integrative model contained in the final chapter-Administrative Science Quarterly
"This book is likely to be most useful to those seeking an introduction to the concepts and methods of social dilemmas research through the late 1980s....I believe that the editor has succeeded in assembling in one place a collection of essays that fit well with the integrative model contained in the final chapter"-Administrative Science Quarterly
DAVID A. SCHROEDER is Professor and chair of the department of Psychology at the University of Arkansas. In addition to his teaching and research concerning social dilemmas, he has a continuing interest in the motivation of helping and is coauthor of a new book entitled The Social Psychology of Helping and Altruism.