The governance cycle in parliamentary democracies : a computational social science approach

Bibliographic Information

The governance cycle in parliamentary democracies : a computational social science approach

Scott de Marchi, Michael Laver

(Cambridge studies in comparative politics)

Cambridge University Press, 2023

  • : paperback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 198-207) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Parliamentary democracy involves a never-ending cycle of elections, government formations, and the need for governments to survive in potentially hostile environments. These conditions require members of any government to make decisions on a large number of issues, some of which sharply divide them. Officials resolve these divisions by 'logrolling'- conceding on issues they care less about, in exchange for reciprocal concessions on issues to which they attach more importance. Though realistically modeling this 'governance cycle' is beyond the scope of traditional formal analysis, this book attacks the problem computationally in two ways. Firstly, it models the behavior of "functionally rational" senior politicians who use informal decision heuristics to navigate their complex high stakes setting. Secondly, by applying computational methods to traditional game theory, it uses artificial intelligence to model how hyper-rational politicians might find strategies that are close to optimal.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • 1. Governance, complexity, computation and rationality
  • 2. The governance cycle
  • 3. Agent based model of government formation and survival
  • 4. Artificial intelligence and government formation
  • 5. Analyzing models of government formation and survival
  • 6. The empirics of government formation and survival
  • 7. Conclusions and aspirations
  • Appendices.

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