Results 351 to 360 of about 945,860 (406)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

When charity begins at home: How personal financial scarcity drives preference for donating locally at the expense of global concerns

Journal of Economic Psychology, 2019
Research was conducted to understand what drives individuals’ decisions to make charitable donations to local charities versus international charities that serve targets in far-away places.
M. Herzenstein, Steven S. Posavac
semanticscholar   +1 more source

An Economic and Ethical Approach to Charity and to Charity Endowments

Review of Social Economy, 2010
We examine how and why donors divide gifts between people in the present (across distance) and between the present and future (across time). US donors tend to give less to charities that benefit the poor and more to charities that benefit the non-poor (such as museums, universities, and arts organizations).
John E, Core, Thomas, Donaldson
openaire   +2 more sources

“Bucket auctions” for charity

Games and Economic Behavior, 2014
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Jeffrey P. Carpenter 0002   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Identifying (our) donors: Toward a social psychological understanding of charity selection in Australia

Psychology & Marketing, 2018
Gender, age, religiosity, and political orientation are often associated with a propensity to give to charity. However, these broad associations mask inconsistencies that are not yet understood.
C. Chapman, W. Louis, B. Masser
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Christmas charity

Nursing Management, 2005
December is traditionally the month of giving and receiving but, if you are put off festive shopping by its sheer commercialism, have look at www.goodgifts.org/goodgifts/default.php for presents with a difference.
openaire   +2 more sources

Valuing Charity

Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 2001
Arrow asserted that a variety of institutional arrangements and observable mores of the medical profession were functional responses to the failure of the market to insure against uncertainties. But one of these norms--the ethic to provide treatment without regard to ability to pay--was also a response to the failure of the political system to assure ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Charity advertising: A literature review and research agenda

Journal of Philanthropy and Marketing, 2023
Wymer Ww Jr, Hellen Gross
exaly  

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