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Browsing Tags religion

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New working paper: Alcohol, Behavioral Norms and Sexual Violence on U.S. College Campuses

This paper, joint with Julia Hoefer, is Discussion Paper number 17147 by the Centre for Economic Policy Research.

Abstract:

This paper explores the role of social norms in influencing the incidence of sexual assault, and the contribution of alcohol to such events. We build a decision theoretic model where agents may use alcohol as a “disinhibitor” to undermine social norms discouraging consensual sexual encounters outside marriage. This makes non-consensual encounters more likely. Stronger norms against consensual sex might therefore increase the incidence of non-consensual sex. We test the theory on data from US college campuses, using the presence of Planned Parenthood clinics in the county as an indicator of norms more accepting of consensual sex. Controlling for other factors, colleges in counties with fewer clinics have more incidents of rape and sexual assault in which alcohol is implicated. Colleges affiliated to the National Collegiate Athletic Association also have more such incidents, suggesting that sporting institutions also act as facilitators of a culture of sexual aggression. We provide suggestive evidence from attitudinal surveys and from campus religious affiliation that disapproval of consensual sex may indeed be involved. We explore rival explanations such as reporting and selection biases.

Betting on the Lord: Lotteries and Religiosity in Haiti

This paper, which is joint with Emmanuelle Auriol, Diego Delissaint, Maleke Fourati and Pepita Miguel-Florensa, is now published in World Development. You can download the paper here.

US churches’ response to Covid-19: Results from Facebook

This paper, which is joint with Eva Raiber, was distributed in pre-print form in CovidEconomics, issue 61 from CEPR:

https://cepr.org/content/covid-economics-vetted-and-real-time-papers-0

You can download it here.

Trust in the image of God: Links between religiosity and reciprocity in Haiti

This paper, which is joint with Emmanuelle Auriol, Diego Delissaint, Maleke Fourati and Pepita Miguel-Florensa, is now published in Economics of Transition and Institutional Change. You can download the paper here.

God insures those who pay? Formal insurance and religious offerings in Ghana.

This paper, which is joint with Emmanuelle Auriol, Julie Lassébie, Amma Panin and Eva Raiber, is now published at the Quarterly Journal of Economics. It’s available on open access here:

https://academic.oup.com/qje/article/135/4/1799/5861944

We started this project back in 2015.

Here are some pictures of very colorful Ghanaian coffins:

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