Publication | Open Access
Traditional and Health-Related Philanthropy: The Role of Resources and Personality
246
Citations
58
References
2006
Year
Organ DonationSocial PsychologyEmpathyEducationSocial SciencesPsychologyPhilanthropyHealth-related PhilanthropySocial IdentityHealth PromotionAltruismApplied Social PsychologyBlood DonationCulturePersonality PsychologyProsocial BehaviorSocial BehaviorPersonality CharacteristicsSocial Responsibility
I study the relationships of resources and personality characteristics to charitable giving, postmortem organ donation, and blood donation in a nationwide sample of persons in households in the Netherlands. I find that specific personality characteristics are related to specific types of giving: agreeableness to blood donation, empathic concern to charitable giving, and prosocial value orientation to postmortem organ donation. I find that giving has a consistently stronger relation to human and social capital than to personality. Human capital increases giving; social capital increases giving only when it is approved by others. Effects of prosocial personality characteristics decline at higher levels of these characteristics. Effects of empathic concern, helpfulness, and social value orientations on generosity are mediated by verbal proficiency and church attendance.
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