- Published: 21 May 2024
- ISBN: 9780262552004
- Imprint: MIT Press Academic
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 264
- RRP: $110.00
Investors and Exploiters in Ecology and Economics
Principles and Applications











- Published: 21 May 2024
- ISBN: 9780262552004
- Imprint: MIT Press Academic
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 264
- RRP: $110.00
"Evolutionary biologists and economists have a shared interest in understanding why some individuals in a group behave as 'free riders', benefiting from the efforts of others. If free riding is a good strategy, what limits its spread in a population? This edited book explores both the underlying science and its practical applications, for example in vaccination policy. It is a very valuable up-to-date summary of knowledge in an important area of interdisciplinary science."
—John Krebs, Emeritus Professor of Zoology, University of Oxford
"Cheats, exploiters, and scroungers have forever been the bane of evolutionary models of cooperation and altruism. This remarkable volume, which brings together leading biologists and economists, sheds new light on understanding a world where investors and exploiters can be found in every nook and cranny of social dynamics."
—Lee Alan Dugatkin, Professor of Biology, University of Louisville; coauthor of How to Tame a Fox (and Build a Dog): Visionary Scientists and a Siberian Tale of Jump-Started Evolution
"Economists hesitate to learn from biologists and vice versa. Investors and Exploiters in Ecology and Economics shows that this can be overcome. This fascinating book sheds new light on cooperation, exploitation, and conflict. Natural resource exploitation and free riding in health are cases in point covered in the volume, yet by extrapolation the insights may even hint toward fundamental forces behind phenomena like populism, protectionism, and inequality."
—Joachim von Braun, Professor for Economic and Technical Change, Director, Center for Development Research, Bonn University, Germany; coeditor of Marginality: Addressing the Nexus of Poverty, Exclusion and Ecology