Corruption Drives the Emergence of Civil Society
Sherief Abdallah, Rasha Sayed, Iyad Rahwan, Brad LeVeck, Manuel, Cebrian, Alex Rutherford, James Fowler

TL;DR
This paper models how corruption undermines centralized punishment systems, showing that weaker authorities combined with peer punishment can better sustain cooperation and public goods provision.
Contribution
It demonstrates that increasing centralized power can worsen cooperation in the presence of corruption, highlighting the importance of combined decentralized and centralized enforcement.
Findings
Corruption reduces effectiveness of centralized punishment.
Weaker centralized authorities enable peer punishment to sustain cooperation.
Citizen participation is crucial for effective policing of public goods.
Abstract
Peer punishment of free-riders (defectors) is a key mechanism for promoting cooperation in society. However, it is highly unstable since some cooperators may contribute to a common project but refuse to punish defectors. Centralized sanctioning institutions (for example, tax-funded police and criminal courts) can solve this problem by punishing both defectors and cooperators who refuse to punish. These institutions have been shown to emerge naturally through social learning and then displace all other forms of punishment, including peer punishment. However, this result provokes a number of questions. If centralized sanctioning is so successful, then why do many highly authoritarian states suffer from low levels of cooperation? Why do states with high levels of public good provision tend to rely more on citizen-driven peer punishment? And what happens if centralized institutions can be…
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