In recent years and especially after the Arab Spring, the world has experienced an increasing number of social conflicts and instability. The simple and generic analytical model developed in this book, bridges behavioral and classical socio-economic literature and can be generalized to a large variety of conflicts. The model describes the clash between two sub-populations,one attempting to re-write the current (social) contract in its favor, the other to maintain the status quo. The free-rider problem obstructs the occurrence of a conflict, leading to a low probability of successful turn-over. Players belonging to the group, which is favorable to the conflict, will not join the revolutionaries, though doing so would be beneficial for the majority of players. Introducing an emotional component counter-acts the free-rider effect and enables the model to predict the existence of two stable equilibria; one with high and another with no conflict potential. In addition, adapting a threshold approach by Granovetter, the likelihood of transition from no to high conflict equilibrium will vary positively with group size.

A Simple Model of Conflic

ILLE, Sebastian
2013-01-01

Abstract

In recent years and especially after the Arab Spring, the world has experienced an increasing number of social conflicts and instability. The simple and generic analytical model developed in this book, bridges behavioral and classical socio-economic literature and can be generalized to a large variety of conflicts. The model describes the clash between two sub-populations,one attempting to re-write the current (social) contract in its favor, the other to maintain the status quo. The free-rider problem obstructs the occurrence of a conflict, leading to a low probability of successful turn-over. Players belonging to the group, which is favorable to the conflict, will not join the revolutionaries, though doing so would be beneficial for the majority of players. Introducing an emotional component counter-acts the free-rider effect and enables the model to predict the existence of two stable equilibria; one with high and another with no conflict potential. In addition, adapting a threshold approach by Granovetter, the likelihood of transition from no to high conflict equilibrium will vary positively with group size.
2013
3659464376
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11382/421982
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