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Tourism Economics | 2009

Preference heterogeneity in relation to museum services

Ugo Colombino; Annamaria Nese

Prevailing trends in the management of European museums underline the importance of additional museum services in fostering and encouraging the optimization of cultural assets while facilitating the collection of resources necessary for conservation. This paper considers the case of the archaeological site of Paestum (Salerno) and presents an analysis of individual preferences in relation to specific policies of cultural heritage management, each characterized by the supply of different museum services. Since the diversity of these services can prompt different individual preferences, the analysis allows for heterogeneity of parameters among individuals.


Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly | 2011

Is the Third Sector an Emerging Economic Institution? Social Preferences Versus Poverty Traps

Adalgiso Amendola; Maria Rosaria Garofalo; Annamaria Nese

Relying on social preference theory and on poverty trap literature, this article suggests a richer and more nuanced role of the third sector as an institution complementary to the state and to the market in an economy’s development process. Social preferences are considered as the micro—fundaments of the third sector in that this promotes activities, laws, and organizational forms coherent with those preferences. The third sector contributes to overcoming poverty traps not only by spreading behavior based on altruism and solidarity but also by promoting investments in welfare services and human capital and by favoring the access of all the agents to the various markets.


Archive | 2006

Social Preferences and the Third Sector: Looking for a Microeconomic Foundation of the Local Development Path

Maria Rosaria Garofalo; Annamaria Nese

The aim of the paper is to endorse the principle, recurrent in non-profit literature, that the third sector is an institution that supports the development process of economic systems. The third sector is considered as an institution that A¢AÂAÂfavors, transmits and cementsA¢AÂA the role of social preferences in a given economy and, in this way, it contributes to development. The paper thus considers two stances taken up in economic theory: (i) the theory of social preferences; (ii) the modern theory of development. These two stances do not exclusively and specifically refer to the third sector, and they generally follow parallel paths, rarely being aware of each other: in the paper, the third sector is assumed to form a bridge between them in that social preferences are supposed to be one of the driving forces in the change process of an economy.


Forum for Social Economics | 2017

Ethnic and Academic Identity: What Role for Children’s Scholastic Effort?

Giuseppina Autiero; Annamaria Nese

AbstractRecent scholarly analysis has focussed on the role that ethnic identity plays in individual economic performances and particularly on how the identification with the culture of home and host countries influences immigrants’ and their children’s labour market outcomes. This paper focuses on the influence of ethnic and personal identity on adolescents’ scholastic effort. We partly draw on Akerlof and Kranton’s contributions in that they recognize the influence of social identity on children’s choice of effort. Nevertheless, in our model, ethnic and personal traits directly determines scholastic effort, which is in line with a strand of the psychology literature. An empirical model consistent with the theoretical one is estimated using the 1970 British Cohort Study, which contains information on how pupils see school and, hence, allows to derive an accurate measures of individual scholastic effort. It provides further useful information in order to identify relevant explanatory factors like the locus...


MPRA Paper | 2015

Body Weight and Gender: Academic Choice and Performance

Adriana Barone; Annamaria Nese

This study examines the relationship between body weight and academic choice and performance, focusing on gender differences and using survey data from students at the University of Salerno in Italy.Our findings indicate a significant negative relationship between body weight and academic performance,particularly for female students.In our examination of BMI and field of study (i.e.,science vs.the humanities),our results indicate that overweight/obese females are less likely than those of average weight to pursue scientific studies, and hence, more remunerative careers.The asymmetry of the findings between males and females suggests that during late adolescence physicality plays different roles according to gender.


Labour | 2014

Individual Preferences and Job Characteristics: An Analysis of Cooperative Credit Banks

Annamaria Nese; Roberta Troisi

The aim of this paper is to analyse individual preferences in relation to different job characteristics. More specifically, this work focuses on the case of employees of cooperative credit banks (CCBs) in Campania and accounts for certain fundamental institutional features: CCBs are designed to pursue specific member interests rather than profit maximization, and most employees are both owners and consumers. The research is conducted by applying a conjoint analysis approach with stated preference data. Novel features of the analysis include the application of this approach to empirical research on worker incentives and the use of a mixed logit model.


International Review of Economics | 2007

Attrition bias in the Capitalia panel

Annamaria Nese; Niall O’Higgins


Research in Economics | 2009

Social norms in repeated public good games

Annamaria Nese; Patrizia Sbriglia


Archive | 2005

In and Out of the Capitalia Sample: Evaluating Attrition Bias

Annamaria Nese; Niall O'Higgins


STUDI ECONOMICI | 2008

Il problema dell'evasione fiscale: opinioni e comportamenti

Annamaria Nese

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Patrizia Sbriglia

University of Naples Federico II

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Adriana Barone

Economic Policy Institute

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Arturo Palomba

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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