How do economists understand and measure normal social
phenomena?
Identifying economic strains in activities such as learning,
group formation, discrimination, and peer dynamics requires
sophisticated data and tools as well as a grasp of prior
scholarship. In this volume leading economists provide an
authoritative summary of social choice economics, from norms and
conventions to the exchange of discrete resources. Including both
theoretical and empirical perspectives, their work provides the
basis for models that can offer new insights in applied economic
analyses.
Reviews the recent approaches that enable economists to separate
influences of culture from those caused by economic and
institutional environments
Explores the recent willingness among economists to consider new
arguments in the utility function
Presumes that these investigations can eventually be translated
into policies
General
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