Cooperation can be sustained by institutions that punish free-riders. Such institutions, however, tend to be subverted by corruption if they are not closely watched. Monitoring can uphold the enforcement of binding agreements ensuring cooperation, but this usually comes at a price. The temptation to skip monitoring and take the institution’s integrity for granted leads to outbreaks of corruption and the breakdown of cooperation. We model the corresponding mechanism by means of evolutionary game theory, using analytical methods and numerical simulations, and find that it leads to sustained or damped oscillations. The results confirm the view that corruption is endemic and transparency a major factor in reducing it
Verma P, Nandi AK, Sengupta S. Bribery games on inter-dependent regular networks. Scientific Reports...
Ensuring global cooperation often poses governance problems shadowed by the tragedy of the commons, ...
Cooperation is ubiquitous in the natural world. What seems nonsensical is why natural selection favo...
In many societies, the power to punish is granted to a centralized authority. While the punishment o...
In this paper we model the evolution of a system of corruption. We assume a fixed population of play...
Illegal logging is a serious threat to plantations in the tropics. Here, we study the coupled dynami...
We investigate corruption as a social dilemma by means of a bribery game in which a risk of collecti...
This article describes how corruption can and ought to be viewed as competing scales of cooperation....
Centralized sanctioning institutions have been shown to emerge naturally through social learning, di...
We introduce an evolutionary dynamical model for corruption in a democratic state describing the int...
The emergence and maintenance of punishment to protect the commons remains an open puzzle in social ...
Punishment offers a powerful mechanism for the maintenance of cooperation in human and animal societ...
Peer punishment of free-riders (defectors) is a key mechanism for promoting cooperation in society [...
Punishment offers a powerful mechanism for the maintenance of cooperation in human and animal societ...
One can restructure institutions, but if individual-level motivations for corrupt behavior are not u...
Verma P, Nandi AK, Sengupta S. Bribery games on inter-dependent regular networks. Scientific Reports...
Ensuring global cooperation often poses governance problems shadowed by the tragedy of the commons, ...
Cooperation is ubiquitous in the natural world. What seems nonsensical is why natural selection favo...
In many societies, the power to punish is granted to a centralized authority. While the punishment o...
In this paper we model the evolution of a system of corruption. We assume a fixed population of play...
Illegal logging is a serious threat to plantations in the tropics. Here, we study the coupled dynami...
We investigate corruption as a social dilemma by means of a bribery game in which a risk of collecti...
This article describes how corruption can and ought to be viewed as competing scales of cooperation....
Centralized sanctioning institutions have been shown to emerge naturally through social learning, di...
We introduce an evolutionary dynamical model for corruption in a democratic state describing the int...
The emergence and maintenance of punishment to protect the commons remains an open puzzle in social ...
Punishment offers a powerful mechanism for the maintenance of cooperation in human and animal societ...
Peer punishment of free-riders (defectors) is a key mechanism for promoting cooperation in society [...
Punishment offers a powerful mechanism for the maintenance of cooperation in human and animal societ...
One can restructure institutions, but if individual-level motivations for corrupt behavior are not u...
Verma P, Nandi AK, Sengupta S. Bribery games on inter-dependent regular networks. Scientific Reports...
Ensuring global cooperation often poses governance problems shadowed by the tragedy of the commons, ...
Cooperation is ubiquitous in the natural world. What seems nonsensical is why natural selection favo...