冲突中的网络:来自非洲大战的理论和证据

Michael D. König, D. Rohner, Mathias Thoenig, Fabrizio Zilibotti
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引用次数: 137

摘要

我们从理论和经验的角度研究军事联盟和敌人的网络如何影响冲突的强度。该模型结合了网络理论和政治经济冲突理论的元素。我们假设一个由外部性增强的图洛克竞赛成功函数:每个群体的力量都因其盟友的战斗努力而增加,并因其对手的战斗努力而削弱。我们获得了战斗博弈纳什均衡的封闭形式表征,以及网络结构如何影响个体和总体战斗努力。然后,我们使用第二次刚果战争的数据进行实证分析,这是一场涉及许多团体的冲突,这些团体处于非正式联盟和竞争的复杂网络中。我们估计了战斗的外部性,并利用这些外部性来推断通过以下方式可以减少冲突强度的程度:(i)消除冲突中涉及的个别群体;旨在减轻各群体之间敌意的绥靖政策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Networks in Conflict: Theory and Evidence from the Great War of Africa
We study from both a theoretical and an empirical perspective how a network of military alliances and enmities affects the intensity of a conflict. The model combines elements from network theory and from the politico-economic theory of conflict. We postulate a Tullock contest success function augmented by an externality: each group’s strength is increased by the fighting effort of its allies, and weakened by the fighting effort of its rivals. We obtain a closed form characterization of the Nash equilibrium of the fighting game, and of how the network structure affects individual and total fighting efforts. We then perform an empirical analysis using data on the Second Congo War, a conflict that involves many groups in a complex network of informal alliances and rivalries. We estimate the fighting externalities, and use these to infer the extent to which the conflict intensity can be reduced through (i) removing individual groups involved in the conflict; (ii) pacification policies aimed at alleviating animosity among groups.
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