Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
1980 - 2025
Current editor(s): Houser, D. and Puzzello, D. From Elsevier Bibliographic data for series maintained by Catherine Liu (). Access Statistics for this journal.
Is something missing from the series or not right? See the RePEc data check for the archive and series.
Volume 166, issue C, 2019
- Adding tournament to tournament: Combining between-team and within-team incentives pp. 1-11

- Michael Majerczyk, Roman Sheremeta and Yu Tian
- Credit, insurance and farmers’ liability: Evidence from a lab in the field experiment with coffee farmers in Costa Rica pp. 12-27

- María A. Naranjo, Janneke Pieters and Francisco Alpizar Rodriguez
- Why not taxation and representation? British politics and the American revolution pp. 28-52

- Sebastian Galiani and Gustavo Torrens
- A behavioral model of the credit cycle pp. 53-83

- Barbara Annicchiarico, Silvia Surricchio and Robert Waldmann
- Do tournament incentives matter in academics? Evidence from personnel data in a top-tier university in China pp. 84-106

- Haifeng Zhang, Junsen Zhang and Yanfeng Zhang
- The causes and consequences of early-adult unemployment: Evidence from cohort data pp. 107-124

- Andrew Clark and Anthony Lepinteur
- When a few undermine the whole: A class of social dilemmas in ridesharing pp. 125-137

- Amnon Rapoport, Hang Qi, Vincent Mak and Eyran J. Gisches
- Social motives in bilateral bargaining games: How power changes perceptions of fairness pp. 138-152

- Paola Mallucci, Diana Yan Wu and Tony Haitao Cui
- Having it easy: Discrimination and specialization in the workplace pp. 153-173

- Sacha Kapoor and Arvind Magesan
- Theory of mind among disadvantaged children: Evidence from a field experiment pp. 174-194

- Gary Charness, John List, Aldo Rustichini, Anya Samek and Jeroen van de Ven
- Using ethical dilemmas to predict antisocial choices with real payoff consequences: An experimental study pp. 195-215

- David Dickinson and David Masclet
- The impact of endogenous and exogenous cash inflows in experimental asset markets pp. 216-238

- Martin Angerer and Wiebke Szymczak
- Change in time preferences: Evidence from the Great East Japan Earthquake pp. 239-245

- Mika Akesaka
- Choking under pressure in front of a supportive audience: Evidence from professional biathlon pp. 246-262

- Ken Harb-Wu and Alex Krumer
- Can markets foster rebellion? The case of the 1837–38 rebellions in Lower Canada pp. 263-287

- Vincent Geloso and Vadim Kufenko
- Evolutionary dynamics in multitasking environments pp. 288-308

- Ryoji Sawa and Dai Zusai
- Objective and subjective indicators in long-term contracting pp. 309-331

- Pak Hung Au and Bin R. Chen
- The short arm of guilt – An experiment on group identity and guilt aversion pp. 332-345

- Alexander Morell
- Competing for market shares: Does the order of moves matter even when it shouldn’t? pp. 346-365

- Tanja Hörtnagl, Rudolf Kerschbamer and Rudi Stracke
- Cooperation and mistrust in relational contracts pp. 366-380

- Holger Herz, Armin Schmutzler and André Volk
- On the credibility of ethical banking pp. 381-402

- Francesca Barigozzi and Piero Tedeschi
- Secondary currency acceptance: Experimental evidence with a dual currency search model pp. 403-431

- Justin Rietz
- The backward hustle: An experimental investigation of tax code notches and labor supply pp. 432-445

- John Gibson, Douglas A. Norton and Robert A. White
- Learning, heterogeneity, and complexity in the New Keynesian model pp. 446-470

- Robert Calvert Jump, Cars Hommes and Paul Levine
- Input, output or mixed monitoring in teams? pp. 471-492

- Parimal K. Bag and Peng Wang
- Kinship, fractionalization and corruption pp. 493-528

- Mahsa Akbari, Duman Bahrami-Rad and Erik Kimbrough
- Do immigrants import terrorism? pp. 529-543

- Andrew Forrester, Benjamin Powell, Alex Nowrasteh and Michelangelo Landgrave
- Spatial persistence of agglomeration in software publishing pp. 544-565

- George Deltas, Dakshina De Silva and Robert P. McComb
- Tat will tell: Tattoos and time preferences pp. 566-585

- Bradley Ruffle and Anne E. Wilson
- Marginal deterrence at work pp. 586-612

- Rosario Crino, Giovanni Immordino and Salvatore Piccolo
- Prior interaction, identity, and cooperation in the Inter-group Prisoner's Dilemma pp. 613-629

- Timothy Cason, Sau-Him Paul Lau and Vai-Lam Mui
- Income and (Ir) rational food choice pp. 630-645

- Jayson Lusk
- Medical malpractice liability and physicians’ behavior: Experimental evidence pp. 646-666

- Massimo Finocchiaro Castro, Paolo Lorenzo Ferrara, Calogero Guccio and Domenico Lisi
- The citation trap: Papers published at year-end receive systematically fewer citations pp. 667-687

- Chao Ma, Yiwei Li, Feng Guo and Kao Si
- Habit formation and activity persistence: Evidence from gym equipment pp. 688-708

- Matthew C. Harris and Lawrence M. Kessler
- Rent extraction and prosocial behavior pp. 709-723

- Tobias Cagala, Ulrich Glogowsky, Veronika Grimm, Johannes Rincke and Amanda Tuset-Cueva
- Can ethics instruction make economics students more pro-social? pp. 724-734

- James Konow
- An experimental study of adolescent behavior under peer observation: Adolescents are more impatient and inconsistent, not more risk-taking, when observed by peers pp. 735-750

- Agnieszka Tymula
- Trust in other people and the usage of peer platform markets pp. 751-766

- Carin Cruijsen, Maurice Doll and Frank van Hoenselaar
- Rockets and votes pp. 767-784

- Yael Elster
- The anatomy of distributional preferences with group identity pp. 785-807

- Daniel Müller
Volume 165, issue C, 2019
- Do economics courses improve students’ analytical skills? A Difference-in-Difference estimation pp. 1-20

- Seife Dendir, Alexei G. Orlov and John Roufagalas
- Path of intertemporal cooperation and limits to turn-taking behavior pp. 21-36

- Yohanes Riyanto and Nilanjan Roy
- Threats and promises in bargaining pp. 37-50

- Bobby (Wing Yin) Chung and Daniel H. Wood
- Cognitive abilities, non-cognitive skills, and gambling behaviors pp. 51-69

- Xiaodong Gong and Rong Zhu
- Are we addicted to love? A parsimonious economic model of love pp. 70-81

- Gigi Foster, Mark Pingle and Jingjing Yang
- The internet effects on sex crime offenses - Evidence from the German broadband internet expansion pp. 82-99

- André Diegmann (geb. Nolte)
- The effects of scarcity on cheating and in-group favoritism pp. 100-117

- Billur Aksoy and Marco Palma
- Just ask? Preference revelation and lying in a public goods experiment pp. 118-135

- Andrea Robbett
- Measuring subjective survival expectations – Do response scales matter? pp. 136-156

- Jochem de Bresser
- Communication and side payments in a duopoly with private costs: An experiment pp. 157-184

- Emmanuel Dechenaux and Shakun Mago
| |