Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, 1081 BT Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Institute for Brain and Behavior Amsterdam, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, 1081 BT Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2024 Mar 11;379(1897):20230034. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2023.0034. Epub 2024 Jan 22.
Across human societies, people are sometimes willing to punish norm violators. Such punishment can take the form of revenge from victims, seemingly altruistic intervention from third parties, or legitimized sanctioning from institutional representatives. Although prior work has documented cross-cultural regularities in norm enforcement, substantial variation exists in the prevalence and forms of punishment across societies. Such cross-societal variation may arise from universal psychological mechanisms responding to different socio-ecological conditions, or from cultural evolutionary processes, resulting in different norm enforcement systems. To date, empirical evidence from comparative studies across diverse societies has remained disconnected, owing to a lack of interdisciplinary integration and a prevalent tendency of empirical studies to focus on different underpinnings of variation in norm enforcement. To provide a more complete view of the shared and unique aspects of punishment across societies, we review prior research in anthropology, economics and psychology, and take a first step towards integrating the plethora of socio-ecological and cultural factors proposed to explain cross-societal variation in norm enforcement. We conclude by discussing how future cross-societal research can use diverse methodologies to illuminate key questions on the domain-specificity of punishment, the diversity of tactics supporting social norms, and their role in processes of norm change. This article is part of the theme issue 'Social norm change: drivers and consequences'.
在人类社会中,人们有时愿意惩罚违反规范的人。这种惩罚可以采取受害者复仇、第三方看似利他的干预或机构代表的合法化制裁等形式。尽管先前的工作已经记录了规范执行方面的跨文化规律,但在不同的社会中,惩罚的普遍性和形式存在很大差异。这种跨社会的差异可能源于对不同社会生态条件的普遍心理机制的反应,也可能源于文化进化过程,从而导致不同的规范执行系统。迄今为止,由于缺乏跨学科的整合以及实证研究普遍倾向于关注规范执行变化的不同基础,来自不同社会的比较研究的实证证据仍然相互脱节。为了更全面地了解社会间惩罚的共同和独特方面,我们回顾了人类学、经济学和心理学方面的先前研究,并朝着整合大量拟议用于解释规范执行跨社会差异的社会生态和文化因素迈出了第一步。我们最后讨论了未来的跨社会研究如何利用多种方法来阐明关于惩罚的特定领域、支持社会规范的策略多样性及其在规范变化过程中的作用的关键问题。本文是主题为“社会规范变化:驱动因素和后果”的特刊的一部分。