Cooperation, Norms, and Revolutions: A Unified Game-Theoretical Approach
Dirk Helbing, Anders Johansson

TL;DR
This paper develops a unified game-theoretical framework to analyze cooperation, norms, and conflicts within and between groups with different preferences, revealing conditions for cooperation, norm evolution, and revolutions.
Contribution
It introduces game-dynamical replicator equations for multiple populations with incompatible interests, providing new insights into intergroup cooperation and conflict dynamics.
Findings
Conditions promoting cooperation in diverse groups
Mechanisms fostering norm evolution and enforcement
Factors leading to conflict and revolutions
Abstract
Cooperation is of utmost importance to society as a whole, but is often challenged by individual self-interests. While game theory has studied this problem extensively, there is little work on interactions within and across groups with different preferences or beliefs. Yet, people from different social or cultural backgrounds often meet and interact. This can yield conflict, since behavior that is considered cooperative by one population might be perceived as non-cooperative from the viewpoint of another. To understand the dynamics and outcome of the competitive interactions within and between groups, we study game-dynamical replicator equations for multiple populations with incompatible interests and different power (be this due to different population sizes, material resources, social capital, or other factors). These equations allow us to address various important questions: For…
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