Koloğlugil, Serhat

Yükleniyor...
Profil fotoğrafı
E-posta Adresi ORCID Profili WoS Profili Scopus Profili YÖK Araştırmacı Profili Google Akademik Profili TR-Dizin Profili SOBİAD Profili Web Sitesi

Organizasyon Birimleri

Organizasyon Birimi
İktisadi, İdari ve Sosyal Bilimler Fakültesi, Ekonomi (İktisat) Bölümü
Ekonomi (İktisat), kıt kaynakların insan ihtiyaçlarını karşılama amaçlı olarak ne şekilde kullanılması gerektiğini inceleyen bilim dalıdır. Modern yaşamın ekonomik alan ile ilgili boyutu insanın toplam faaliyetleri içinde sürekli olarak öne çıkıyor. Bunun yanısıra modern insan bu boyutun sağladığı maddi refah sayesinde yaşamındaki diğer boyutların ayrımına daha iyi varıyor ve yaşam pratiğinde onlardan daha çok yarar sağlamak, daha çok zevk almak üzere tercihler yapıyor. Yaşamın kalitesi şüphesiz yalnızca ekonomi ile sınırlı değildir. Ancak ekonomik yaşamın kalitesinin ve kullanılmamış potansiyellerinin ayrımına ancak iyi bir ekonomi eğitimi ile varılabilir. Ekonomi biliminin analitik yaklaşımını öğrenmiş, uzun dönemli, yaşamsal olduğu kadar günlük ve sıradan seçimlerinde de ekonomi biliminin araçlarını kullanan insanlar kaçırdıkları ve değerlendirdikleri fırsatların fayda ve zararlarını doğru olarak hesaplayabilirler. Böylece bu insanlar kendilerini, yakın çevrelerini ve içinde yaşadıkları toplumu zenginleştirmede önderlik rolünü üstlenebilirler.

Adı Soyadı

Serhat Koloğlugil

İlgi Alanları

Kurumsal İktisat, Politik İktisat, İktisat Sosyolojisi

Kurumdaki Durumu

Aktif Personel

Arama Sonuçları

Listeleniyor 1 - 5 / 5
  • Yayın
    Free software, business capital, and institutional change: a veblenian analysis of the software industry
    (M. E. Sharpe Inc, 2012-12) Koloğlugil, Serhat; Koloğlugil, Serhat
    Free software, unlike proprietary software under exclusive copyright control, exemplifies a form of productive and innovative activity that is based upon mutual sharing of technological knowledge. Free software engineers, who get connected through various software-development projects, voluntarily contribute their time and skills to produce computer programs which, they insist, should be free for anyone to use, modify, and distribute. This paper argues that Thorstein Veblen's socio-economic theory - in particular his conceptions of capital, technological knowledge and institutional change - offers a fruitful framework to analyze the emergence of free software as an economic and social phenomenon. From the Veblenian perspective, the free software movement argues that the technological knowledge in the software industry should freely be available to society as a part of its common stock of knowledge. In other words, they are against the use of copyright law as a predatory strategy by software corporations, while the current technological conditions in the software industry allow for an institutional arrangement of production and innovation based on cooperative habits of thought.
  • Yayın
    Gain sensitivity and cheating: the role of psychological entitlement
    (Hogrefe AG-Hogrefe AG Suisse, 2023-10) Peker, Müjde; Koloğlugil, Serhat; Şahin, Türkay; Demircan, Nilhan; Koloğlugil, Serhat
    [No abstract available]
  • Yayın
    Thorstein Veblen's Darwinian framework and gene-culture coevolution theory
    (Routledge, 2016-07-03) Koloğlugil, Serhat; Koloğlugil, Serhat
    At the turn of the previous century, Thorstein Veblen used Darwinian evolutionary principles to explain the macro-historical evolution of human societies, as well as the institutional structure of the modern pecuniary culture. Even if Veblen had a strong intuitive grasp of the evolutionary forces operating in society, he was not always clear and explicit in developing his ideas towards a full-fledged, consistent evolutionary social theory. This paper argues that a relatively recent theoretical approach, gene-culture coevolution theory, has the conceptual apparatus to remedy this problem and thus make Veblen's ideas an important part of contemporary evolutionary thinking in social theory.
  • Yayın
    Is ingroup favoritism contingent on the expectation of reciprocity from ingroup members?: The case of reputation manipulation
    (Springer, 2021-12) Koloğlugil, Serhat; Tekeş, Burcu; Koloğlugil, Serhat
    We use a game of cooperation with minimal groups to test whether ingroup favoritism can be explained by the expectation of reciprocity from ingroup members. To do this, we first manipulate participants’ level expected cooperation from ingroup and outgroup partners by letting them play the game with different partners having different (high or low) cooperative reputations. We then analyze how these expectations affect ingroup bias in the game across different reputation conditions. We find that even if subjects expect the same level of cooperation from ingroup and outgroup partners with high reputation, they still cooperate more with the former than the latter. This contradicts the reciprocity hypothesis in the literature which explains intergroup discrimination solely in reference to differential reciprocal expectations. But, against ingroup and outgroup partners with low cooperative reputation, subjects’ level of cooperation almost exactly parallel their reciprocal expectations. This result is in line with the reciprocity hypothesis. We explain these findings by arguing that both reciprocal expectations and social identity play their parts in the emergence of ingroup favoritism, but that their relative strengths may depend on the interaction with other contextual factors. We also argue in favor of further experimental research as to how reciprocity and social identity interact with such third factors as partner’s reputation in different games of social exchange.
  • Yayın
    Child domestic labour and mothers' employment in Turkey
    (Taylor and Francis, 2016-01-01) Susanlı, Zehra Bilgen; İnanç Tunçer, Özlem; Koloğlugil, Serhat; Koloğlugil, Serhat
    This paper takes an initial step in studying the determinants of child domestic labour and its relationship with mothers' employment in Turkey. We focus on children that are responsible for performing the domestic chores in their households. Using household level data from Demographic and Health Survey (2003), we find that the probability of child domestic labour is greater if the oldest child in the household is female; and this is stronger in rural areas. We also find that the likelihood of child domestic labour decreases with parental education. Our findings also suggest that the unobservable factors that increase the probability that a mother works increases the probability of child domestic labour in urban areas, but the opposite is true for rural areas.