Honor in the Wild : Virtuous Violence between the Hobbesian Trap and Social Order.

Deterrence Honor Multilevel analysis School violence Smith-Price model Social context

Journal

Human nature (Hawthorne, N.Y.)
ISSN: 1936-4776
Titre abrégé: Hum Nat
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 9010063

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Sep 2023
Historique:
accepted: 20 07 2023
medline: 2 10 2023
pubmed: 6 9 2023
entrez: 6 9 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

"Culture of honor" means that individuals deter others by signaling their commitment to violent retaliation. We develop a multilevel explanation of cross-level interdependence of honor and violence. According to our concept of system-level honor, a social system is loaded with deterrence signaling if culture of honor is highly prevalent in the system. In line with the Smith and Price (1973, in Nature, https://www.nature.com/articles/246015a0 ) model, we argue that high system-level honor discourages Prober-Retaliator behavior: some individuals might tend to challenge others they assume to be inferior to increase their own reputation. Both individual culture of honor and system-level honor contribute to an increase in violence (H1; H2). However, as system-level honor and deterrence become more prevalent, the impact of individual honor diminishes because engaging in violent behavior becomes increasingly expensive within such a system (H3). As a second contextual effect, inequality in culture of honor should therefore increase violent behavior because it encourages Prober-Retaliator behavior (H4). We analyze the effect of culture of honor on school violence among 15-year-old adolescents. Disentangling the micro- and context-level effects of culture of honor on violent behavior in a multilevel analysis framework allows the estimation of a cross-level interaction using a large data set from more than 25,000 adolescents in more than 1,300 schoolroom contexts. Results are in line with our H3, but not with H4. Model-based predictions show that the deterrent effect must be unrealistically high to generate an equilibrium of average violence.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37672175
doi: 10.1007/s12110-023-09455-1
pii: 10.1007/s12110-023-09455-1
pmc: PMC10543791
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

400-421

Informations de copyright

© 2023. The Author(s).

Références

Science. 2009 Jun 5;324(5932):1293-8
pubmed: 19498163
Hum Nat. 2019 Jun;30(2):149-154
pubmed: 30848430
Evol Anthropol. 2015 May-Jun;24(3):111-26
pubmed: 26081116
Science. 2007 Oct 26;318(5850):636-40
pubmed: 17962562
Hum Nat. 2018 Dec;29(4):371-389
pubmed: 30251000

Auteurs

Michael Windzio (M)

University of Bremen, 330440, 28334, Bremen, PF, Germany. mwindzio@uni-bremen.de.

Dirk Baier (D)

ZHAW Zurich University of Applied Sciences, Winterthur, Switzerland.

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Classifications MeSH