In 2008, an economist and a law professor proposed a radical new approach to politics: Telling people not to do bad stuff.
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Where to find us:
Sources:
- Mike's Maintenance Phase episode on the godfather of the "cafeteria nudge"
- Nudge: Concept, Effectiveness, and Ethics
- From mechanism to virtue: Evaluating Nudge theory
- The effectiveness of nudging: A meta-analysis of choice architecture interventions across behavioral domains
- Why the Most Important Idea in Behavioral Decision-Making Is a Fallacy
- Behavioral Winter
- Why Is Behavioral Economics So Popular?
- The Origins of Anti-Litter Campaigns
- Do Normative Appeals Affect Tax Compliance? Evidence from a Controlled Experiment in Minnesota
- Opt-out legislations: the mysterious viability of the false
- Opt-out policies capacity to increase organ donors is limited
- Assessing Global Organ Donation Policies: Opt-In vs Opt-Out
- What Counts as a Nudge?
- Preventing Secondary Pregnancy In Adolescents: A Model Program
- The Effect of Monetary Incentives and Peer Support Groups on Repeat Adolescent Pregnancies A Randomized Trial of the Dollar-a-Day Program
- The i-frame and the s-frame: How focusing on individual-level solutions has led behavioral public policy astray
- Can behavioural economics make us healthier?
- On the Supposed Evidence for Libertarian Paternalism
Thanks to Mindseye for our theme song!
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