Abstract We introduce the possibility of coercive punishment by specialized enforcers into a model of community enforcement. We assume that, just as regular agents need to be given incentives to cooperate with each other, specialized enforcers need to be given incentives to carry out costly punishments. We fully characterize optimal equilibria in the model. When the specialized enforcement technology is sufficiently effective, cooperation is best sustained by a “one-time enforcer punishment equilibrium”, where any deviation by a regular agent is punished only once, and only by enforcers. In contrast, enforcers themselves are disciplined (at least in part) by community enforcement. The reason why there is no community enforcem...
The imposition of sanctions is one of the most common means of enforcing cooperation in decentralize...
Altruistic punishment for defectors is considered as a key motive for the explanation of cooperation...
I investigate whether a community can sustain cooperation in the repeated prisoner’s dilemma by havi...
The question of how cooperation evolves and is maintained among nonkin is central to the biological,...
The emergence and maintenance of punishment to protect the commons remains an open puzzle in social ...
As explained by Axelrod in his seminal work An Evolutionary Approach to Norms, punishment is a key m...
In human societies, cooperative behavior in joint enterprises is often enforced through institutions...
Monitoring with implicated punishment is common in human societies to avert freeriding on common goo...
This paper develops a new theory of community enforcement that explains how cooperation can be susta...
In small groups norm enforcement is provided by mutual punishment and reward. In large societies we ...
This paper investigates the efficacy of a punishment mechanism in promoting cooperative behaviour in...
Punishment plays a crucial role in achieving and maintaining norm compliance. Several works have sho...
Evidence from field and laboratory experiments indicates that a large fraction of the people behave ...
Defense Date: 21/09/2009Examining Board: Professor Frederick van der Ploeg, University of Oxford, S...
In human societies, cooperative behavior in joint enterprises is often enforced through institutions...
The imposition of sanctions is one of the most common means of enforcing cooperation in decentralize...
Altruistic punishment for defectors is considered as a key motive for the explanation of cooperation...
I investigate whether a community can sustain cooperation in the repeated prisoner’s dilemma by havi...
The question of how cooperation evolves and is maintained among nonkin is central to the biological,...
The emergence and maintenance of punishment to protect the commons remains an open puzzle in social ...
As explained by Axelrod in his seminal work An Evolutionary Approach to Norms, punishment is a key m...
In human societies, cooperative behavior in joint enterprises is often enforced through institutions...
Monitoring with implicated punishment is common in human societies to avert freeriding on common goo...
This paper develops a new theory of community enforcement that explains how cooperation can be susta...
In small groups norm enforcement is provided by mutual punishment and reward. In large societies we ...
This paper investigates the efficacy of a punishment mechanism in promoting cooperative behaviour in...
Punishment plays a crucial role in achieving and maintaining norm compliance. Several works have sho...
Evidence from field and laboratory experiments indicates that a large fraction of the people behave ...
Defense Date: 21/09/2009Examining Board: Professor Frederick van der Ploeg, University of Oxford, S...
In human societies, cooperative behavior in joint enterprises is often enforced through institutions...
The imposition of sanctions is one of the most common means of enforcing cooperation in decentralize...
Altruistic punishment for defectors is considered as a key motive for the explanation of cooperation...
I investigate whether a community can sustain cooperation in the repeated prisoner’s dilemma by havi...