Jean Ensminger is an American social scientist. She is the Edie and Lew Wasserman Professor of Social Science at Caltech. Her scholarship focuses on the political economy of Africa, global distribution of wealth, corruption in development and decentralized government. Along with Robert Boyd and Joseph Henrich, she did some of the first lab-in-the-field experiments on prosociality, in the 1990s. [1]
Ensminger trained with paleontologist Louis Leakey in the Olduvai Gorge in Kenya. [2] Her doctoral research focused on the Orma of Kenya. She obtained her Ph.D. from Northwestern University in 1984. [3]
Ensminger's fieldwork used methods from game theory to study whether human behavior is naturally cooperative or competitive, and to explain how nations became rich or poor. [2] She applied New Institutional Economics to study property rights and transaction costs. Ensminger described how economic incentives influenced social behaviors including religious choices. [3] Prior to arriving at Caltech, Ensminger taught at Washington University as part of a group assembled by Douglass North, the 1993 Nobel laureate in Economics. [4] Her research built on North's work comparing the relative impacts of preferences and costs on institutional change. [5]
While working on development projects in Kenya, Ensminger became interested in the scope of corruption of World Bank initiatives in the area, and designed methods to quantitate its magnitude. [6]
Ensminger was the first woman head of a division - Humanities and Social Sciences- at Caltech, from 2002 to 2006. [2] As a visiting scholar at the Russell Sage Foundation in 2006–2007, she compared and contrasted altruism between nomadic Kenyans and urban Americans, and investigated how social networks, information, trust, and economic power impact behaviors. [7]
Ensminger served as President of the Society for Economic Anthropology.
With Joseph Henrich, Ensminger was co–principal investigator of the Roots of Human Sociality Project, which used dictator games and other research tools to study the role of prosociality in bringing change to market institutions. [3]
Ensminger has been asked if her findings, from studying some of the world's poorest people living in subsistence economies, are relevant to industrial societies. She commented, "People are more alike everywhere than most people think." [2]