Phase 1. Demonstrate understanding of the dispute you have been given. Provide a summary of your dispute episode and an initial reference list that

Similar documents
General Deterrence and International Conflict: Testing Perfect Deterrence Theory

Deterrence and Compellence

Candidate Citizen Models

GOING ALONE UK TO LEAVE THE EUROPEAN UNION - AN EXPAT SAVINGS TEAM UPDATE. Going alone - UK to leave the European Union

14.770: Introduction to Political Economy Lecture 11: Economic Policy under Representative Democracy

Strategy in Law and Business Problem Set 1 February 14, Find the Nash equilibria for the following Games:

GAME THEORY. Analysis of Conflict ROGER B. MYERSON. HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge, Massachusetts London, England

ECONOMICS 115: THE WORLD ECONOMY IN THE 20 TH CENTURY PAST PROBLEM SETS Fall (First Set)

Answers to Practice Problems. Median voter theorem, supermajority rule, & bicameralism.

Lobbying in Washington DC

MIDTERM EXAM: Political Economy Winter 2013

Winning with the bomb. Kyle Beardsley and Victor Asal

Flanagan s Status Quo. Lindsay Swinton. April 12, 2007 ISCI 330

1 Grim Trigger Practice 2. 2 Issue Linkage 3. 3 Institutions as Interaction Accelerators 5. 4 Perverse Incentives 6.

ECON : Essentials of Economics. Macroeconomic Term Paper. War, what is it good for ₁

Chapter 2: World War I: World on Fire. Instructor Chapter Overview

The Theory of Hegemonic Stability and Embedded Liberalism. The Case of the Bretton Woods System

A system is a set of units that interact with one another on a regular basis and according to a set of rules that stem from a well-defined structure.

Maintaining Authority

Allocating Pollution Load

University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA

Introduction to Political Economy Problem Set 3

CHINA IN THE WORLD PODCAST. Host: Paul Haenle Guest: Robert Ross

INDEPENDENT EVALUATION GROUP INDONESIA: COUNTRY ASSISTANCE EVALUATION APPROACH PAPER

EXTREME EVENTS AND THE POLICY SCIENCES. Ronald D. Brunner Center for Public Policy Research, University of Colorado June 6, 2000

A Study of Approval voting on Large Poisson Games

Lobbying and Policy Change in

Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance by Douglass C. North Cambridge University Press, 1990

Election Theory. How voters and parties behave strategically in democratic systems. Mark Crowley

RUNNING A POLITICAL CAMPAIGN

Strengthening Protection of Labor Rights through Preferential Trade Agreements (PTAs)

Preserving the Long Peace in Asia

LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE 2016 ELECTION

Social Science and History: How Predictable is Political Behavior?

Do not turn over until you are told to do so by the Invigilator.

Introduction [to Imports, Exports, and Jobs]

Testing Political Economy Models of Reform in the Laboratory

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

Chapter Four: Chamber Competitiveness, Political Polarization, and Political Parties

RATIONAL CHOICE AND CULTURE

Sincere versus sophisticated voting when legislators vote sequentially

The Principle of Convergence in Wartime Negotiations. Branislav L. Slantchev Department of Political Science University of California, San Diego

and with support from BRIEFING NOTE 1

Sincere Versus Sophisticated Voting When Legislators Vote Sequentially

The Power to Hurt: Costly Conflict with Completely Informed States. Branislav L. Slantchev Department of Political Science University of Rochester

Choice Under Uncertainty

Monetary Theory and Central Banking By Allan H. Meltzer * Carnegie Mellon University and The American Enterprise Institute

Supporting Information Political Quid Pro Quo Agreements: An Experimental Study

Game Theory for Political Scientists. James D. Morrow

Voting rules: (Dixit and Skeath, ch 14) Recall parkland provision decision:

Sage Publications, Inc. is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Journal of Conflict Resolution.

How China Can Defeat America

PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICS

Charles I Plosser: A progress report on our monetary policy framework

Quiz # 12 Chapter 17 The Public Policy Process

Inequality and economic growth

(Re)creating a market economy: the case of the Czech Republic

IMPACT OF ASIAN FLU ON CANADIAN EXPORTS,

Notes for Session 7 Basic Voting Theory and Arrow s Theorem

What is political behavior. Political Science: the scientific study of political behavior. Responses to deleterious changes in one s environment

Theories of the Historical Development of American Schooling

How did the public view the Supreme Court during. The American public s assessment. Rehnquist Court. of the

Brazil: Low inflation and a longer easing cycle

4 Rebuilding a World Economy: The Post-war Era

Research Note: Gaming NAFTA. March 15, Gaming NAFTA: Trump v. Nieto

SHOULD THE UNITED STATES WORRY ABOUT LARGE, FAST-GROWING ECONOMIES?

Citizen Opinion Survey

International Relations Theory and Game Theory: Baroque Modeling Choices and Empirical Robustness

TWENTY-five hundred years ago, Sun Tzu articulated his views

Julie Lenggenhager. The "Ideal" Female Candidate

Future direction of the immigration system: overview. CABINET PAPER (March 2017)

Euro Survey of Spring 2010: Sovereign Debt Crisis Left Traces in CESEE Households Sentiment, Foreign Currency Portfolios Broadly Unchanged

Remittances and the Macroeconomic Impact of the Global Economic Crisis in the Kyrgyz Republic and Tajikistan

Advisory Commission of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East

LEARNING FROM SCHELLING'S STRATEGY OF CONFLICT by Roger Myerson 9/29/2006

POWER TRANSITIONS AND DISPUTE ESCALATION IN EVOLVING INTERSTATE RIVALRIES PAUL R. HENSEL. and SARA MCLAUGHLIN

RUSSIA S SYRIAN MILITARY SURPRISE: STRATEGIC TAKEAWAYS FROM A WIKISTRAT WARGAME

November 2, 2012, 14:30-16:30 Venue: CIGS Meeting Room 3

Alternative Dispute Resolution: An Economic Analysis

Try to see it my way. Frame congruence between lobbyists and European Commission officials

Nationalism. Students analyze the causes and course of the First World War.

The First Government: How it Worked

This study examines how sovereign debt yields reflect wartime events and

netw rks Reading Essentials and Study Guide Politics and Economics, Lesson 3 Ford and Carter

CHAPTER 4. Chapter 4.6 Future Hopes and Fears: A Kuwaiti Perspective

PS 124A Midterm, Fall 2013

Answer THREE questions, ONE from each section. Each section has equal weighting.

Consumer Expectations: Politics Trumps Economics. Richard Curtin University of Michigan

CHAPTER 6: Bureaucracies, Groups, and Individuals in the Foreign Policy Process

Public Forum on Kenyan-German Perceptions on the Economy Dr. Sebastian Paust: Germany s Perception of the Present Economy Situation in Kenya Date

Conventional Deterrence: An Interview with John J. Mearsheimer

International Cooperation, Parties and. Ideology - Very preliminary and incomplete

Campaign Contributions and Political Polarization

LOGROLLING. Nicholas R. Miller Department of Political Science University of Maryland Baltimore County Baltimore, Maryland

2016 POLITICAL ADVOCACY FUND

1 Electoral Competition under Certainty

The uses and abuses of evolutionary theory in political science: a reply to Allan McConnell and Keith Dowding

A more dynamic welfare state for a more dynamic Europe

European Tourism Trends & Prospects Executive Summary

Understanding China s Middle Class and its Socio-political Attitude

Transcription:

Phase 1. emonstrate understanding of the dispute you have been given. Provide a summary of your dispute episode and an initial reference list that you will use for future research. This will include identification of key leaders in each country, a detailed description of the relative capabilities of each country, why either country could not (perhaps) use their full capabilities in this dispute, whether either country was a major power, the regime type of each country (using both the Polity Score and a more descriptive identification, identification of the alliance(s) between the countries if an alliance type is listed. Provide an analysis and discussion of the predicted outcome using the international interaction game and the ordinal preferences you have been given. (2-3 pages in at least eight paragraphs, not including one page for the international interaction game worksheet and another page for the works cited list.)

n explicit outline for Phase 1 is provided as a guide: Phase 1 Outline.Opening 1. Name of dispute 2. ates 3. etween what countries 4. Summary of "dispute information" 5. Where did the relevant events take place?.state 1. Regime type 2. Major-power status 3. Key decision-makers C.State 1. Regime type 2. Major-power status 3. Key decision-makers.relative capabilities 1. Military personnel 2. Military expenditures 3. Energy consumption 4. Iron & steel production 5. Urban population 6. Total population 7. Percent of system capabilities E. Qualifiers to relative capabilities

. lliance between the two countries? G.International interaction game 1. Predicted outcome 2. "Off the equilibrium path" decisions H.Comparison of predicted outcome and actual outcome using the "hostility-level method" etermining the actual outcome using the hostility-level method : Highest Hostility Level for State Highest Hostility Level for State 0 1 2 3 4 5 0 SQ 1 cq 2 Cap 3 cq 4 Cap War 5

52 WORL POLITICS i: Given subgame perfect behavioral strategies, players choose the strategy with the greatest expected utility. 2: The outcome of war is probabilistic, with PI being player i's subjective probability of gaining its demand, with,ei. 3: The initiator of force gains its demand with certainty only if the adversary chooses to capitulate rather than to retaliate. The capitulating state loses with certainty. 4: ll nations prefer to resolve their crises through negotiations rather than to reach the same resolution after bearing the heavy human, material, and political costs of war. 5: Each outcome of the crisis subgame has potential benefits and/or costs associated with it. We decompose the costs into constituent parts such that ax, T, y, ( > o; and T > ax,. a is the cost in lost life and property associated with fighting away from one's home territory; T is the cost in life and property of fighting at home as the target of an attack; 'y is the cost in life and property from a first strike to which the attacked party gives in; and { is the domestic political cost (separate from lost life and property) associated with usingforce. 6: The utility from gaining one's demands exceeds the utility from keeping the status quo, which in turn exceeds the utility from losing by acceding to an adversary's demands: G > Q > L > o.

Nation i's Preferences for Outcomes Outcome Ordinal restriction on ordering Possible preference rank cq j > all other outcomes 8 > cq i, Cap i, War i, War j 7 to 5 SQ > cq i, Cap i 7 to 3 Cap j > War i, War j 7 to 3 cq i > Cap i 5 to 2 War i > War j 5 to 2 Cap i 4 to 1 War j 4 to 1 dapted from Table 2.3, ueno de Mesquita and Lalman, 1992, War and Reason. i can mean either state or state. When you are thinking about state 's preferences, i = and j =. When you are thinking about state 's preferences, i = and j =.

The International Interaction Game ueno de Mesquita and Lalman, 1992, War and Reason. asic War Theorem additional preference restrictions : Cap > War & War > cq ~ : Cap > & War > cq ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Cap War cq ~ ~ SQ cq ~ ~ Cap Therefore, : War > cq > Cap > War ~ War ~ Cap War Cap War = emand ~ = no emand = use orce ~ = do not use orce SQ = Status Quo = tiation cq = cquiescence by cq = cquiescence by Cap = Capitulation by Cap = Capitulation by War = War started by War = War started by

The International Interaction Game ueno de Mesquita and Lalman, 1992, War and Reason. asic War Theorem additional preference restrictions : Cap > War & War > cq : Cap > & War > cq ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Cap War cq ~ ~ SQ cq ~ ~ Cap ~ War ~ Cap War Cap War = emand ~ = no emand = use orce ~ = do not use orce SQ = Status Quo = tiation cq = cquiescence by cq = cquiescence by Cap = Capitulation by Cap = Capitulation by War = War started by War = War started by

The International Interaction Game ueno de Mesquita and Lalman, 1992, War and Reason. asic War Theorem additional preference restrictions : Cap > War & War > cq : Cap > & War > cq ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Cap War cq ~ ~ SQ cq ~ ~ Cap ~ War ~ Cap War Cap War = emand ~ = no emand = use orce ~ = do not use orce SQ = Status Quo = tiation cq = cquiescence by cq = cquiescence by Cap = Capitulation by Cap = Capitulation by War = War started by War = War started by

The International Interaction Game ueno de Mesquita and Lalman, 1992, War and Reason. asic War Theorem additional preference restrictions : Cap > War & War > cq : Cap > & War > cq ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Cap War cq ~ ~ SQ cq ~ ~ Cap ~ War ~ Cap War Cap War = emand ~ = no emand = use orce ~ = do not use orce SQ = Status Quo = tiation cq = cquiescence by cq = cquiescence by Cap = Capitulation by Cap = Capitulation by War = War started by War = War started by

The International Interaction Game ueno de Mesquita and Lalman, 1992, War and Reason. asic War Theorem additional preference restrictions : Cap > War & War > cq : Cap > & War > cq ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Cap War cq ~ ~ SQ cq ~ ~ Cap ~ War ~ Cap War Cap War = emand ~ = no emand = use orce ~ = do not use orce SQ = Status Quo = tiation cq = cquiescence by cq = cquiescence by Cap = Capitulation by Cap = Capitulation by War = War started by War = War started by

The International Interaction Game ueno de Mesquita and Lalman, 1992, War and Reason. asic War Theorem additional preference restrictions : Cap > War & War > cq : Cap > & War > cq ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Cap War cq ~ ~ SQ cq ~ ~ Cap ~ War ~ Cap War Cap War = emand ~ = no emand = use orce ~ = do not use orce SQ = Status Quo = tiation cq = cquiescence by cq = cquiescence by Cap = Capitulation by Cap = Capitulation by War = War started by War = War started by

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ile:eutscher_und.svg

http://www.ieg-maps.uni-mainz.de/gif/peu861serie2_a4_mb.gif

http://www.ieg-maps.uni-mainz.de/gif/peu867serie2_a4_mb.gif

ORIGINS O GERMN HEGEMONY 41 a 20 20 T-3 g i ustpia 10 EL 10 10 ca L!J 5 5 4-, co a~~~~~~ya EL0 I181 1825 I8135 1845 1855 1865 1875 Year IGURE 2a THE USTRO-PRUSSIN ECONOMIC TRNsITIONa The data on pig iron were provided by the Correlates of War Project at the University of Michigan. on, ustria began a precipitous decline in its military capabil- mid-i85os ities while ismarck launched Prussia on a campaign of military expansion. ccording to the indicators used here, the power transition literally occurred in i866. The evidence thus far suggests that the critical difference in growth rates postulated by power-transition and hegemonic stability theorists was satisfied in i866, but that the required disagreement over the international status quo was not satisfied. It is possible, however, that there was a widespread perception of a sharp disagreement over the international status quo even though, by objective criteria, such differences did not exist. We can never know with certainty what others believed at a given time, but it is possible to develop sensitive indicators that should reflect quite precisely the prewar beliefs about the impact of an ustro- Prussian war on the international status quo. The cost of money the money market discount rate-in key financial centers reflects people's expectations regarding the future value of that

42 WORL POLITICS 20 - - 20 o 15 uotria Prussia - i5 EL '-4 w~ ~ ~~~e 5 5 iai5 1825i 1535 1845 1855 1865 1875 Year' IGURE 2b THE ustro-prussin MILITRY TRNSITION a athe data on military power were provided by the correlates of War Project at the University of Michigan. money. When, for instance, a government finds it difficul to borrow money, it is forced to raise the rate it pays for the money the discount rate to attract lenders. Thus, a rising discount rate for a nation's money reflects a broad base of declining confidence in that nation. Just as the rise or decline in discount rates reveals information about expectations, so do changes in discount rates across countries. If external conditions are expected to affect everyone more or less equally, the money market discount rates for different currencies fluctuate more or less equally; each will respond equivalently to rising or falling fears and uncertainties. ut, if some countries are expected to be differentially affected by events, their rates will rise or fall (depending upon the content of expectations) more than that of other, less affected, countries. igure 3a depicts biweekly observations of the money market discount rate for erlin and for a European baseline (defined as the average of the discount rates for London and msterdam, two key financial centers in the nineteenth century) between January i863 and January i865. The

44 WORL POLITICS 10 - _ -4J 4 6 1 164 1e tu ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ e THE3 1864N 1865WGHOSE, 6 tated during the past week by the prospect of war, and prices have fallen heavily."32 Similar reports can be found virtually every week up to the outbreak of hostilities. igure 3b demonstrates that, despite the fear of war and its reflection in the rising cost of money, the crisis did not have a substantial differential impact on the expectations concerning Prussia. uring the war, however, while the cost of money rose markedly in London, erlin, and msterdam, 'it rose more in Prussia. This reinforces the widely reported observation that Prussia was expected to lose the war.33 The fact that the price differential between erlin and the other key financial centers was small supports the belief that the perceived stakes in the war were not very large. It is interesting to note that immediately after the battle of Kbniggrdtz the market responded with a rapid fall in the price of money, 32 The Economist, pril 7, i866, p. 4I4, and May 5, i866, p. 535. 33 Simon echoes the sentiment of many historians when he writes, "it is important to remember that it was by no means a foregone conclusion that Prussia would win; pessimism was widespread in the Prussian camp, and the ustrian government was confident of victory" (fn. I8), 30-31. See also Taylor (fn. 22), I26, regarding expectations from the ustrian perspective, and Showalter (fn. 25), I2I, for a general view of Prussian weaknesses.

ORIGINS O GERMN HEGEMONY 45 10 - -10 423 C1 I-C :E3 X ase { I I 6156J 1 H56 1867 1869 Yew IGUREP3 THE SEVEN WEEKS WR, I 866 in which Prussia led the baseline of London and msterdam. Thus, the expectations in the financial markets were updated to take account of the new information revealed on the battlefield-that the market had underestimated Prussia's chance of victory. The prewar fears of postwar inflation or of defaults on money instruments by a defeated Prussia were allayed by Prussia's decisive victory. Prussia's place in the European international system was not expected, ex ante, to be fundamentally changed by the Seven Weeks' War; this can be seen from a statistical assessment of the difference in the price of money for a significant period prior to the war compared to the period surrounding the war. If the period surrounding the war's crucial events-from the announcement of the Italo-Prussian alliance on pril 8 to the end of the war on July 28-had reflected expectations of a fundamental change from the status quo ante for Prussia, the mean difference between the Prussian and base discount rate for that period would have been significantly different from the mean difference for the prewar period. If the international status quo had not been p erceived to be at risk, then there would not have been a significant difference.