0 behaviour in which two people or groups of people give each other help and advantages --
1 a situation in which two groups agree to help each other by behaving in the same way or by giving each other similar advantages: --
If mutuality and reciprocity are indeed important to us, those values can be achieved perfectly well without resorting to such policies.
This facilitated continuation of cultural patterns of reciprocity with a resulting sense of value.
They nevertheless suggest a basic pattern or cultural reciprocity between citizens and parliament that is substantiated by the distribution of electoral procedures.
These findings support the various reciprocity and exchange theories reviewed earlier, and provide further evidence that crowding out is less likely to occur.
Costly signaling could be treated as a component of indirect reciprocity because it acts through an audience.
Although moral values and social obligation motivate older volunteers slightly more than other age groups, motivational multiplicity and reciprocity also apply to older volunteers.
In interactions with their offspring, depressed women are less attentive than others, show less reciprocity, and alternate between disengagement and intrusiveness.
As mentioned above, reciprocity norms may vary both by the type of relationship in which exchange occurs and by the type of support exchanged.