This paper examines the impact of policy-makers' horizons on the sustainability of international cooperation. We describe a prisoners' dilemma game between two infinitely-lived organizations (countries) run by agents (policy-makers) with a shorter tenure. The agents' mandates are finite but potentially renewable and staggered across different organizations. We show that the efficient cooperative equilibrium is only sustainable when policy-makers are re-electable. Moreover, re-election incentives can act as a discipline device, making it easier to sustain cooperation between policy-makers with renewable mandates than between policy-makers who are automatically re-elected. However, if the chances of re-election depend significantly on recent ...
We extend a simple repeated, multilateral bargaining model to allow successful agenda setters to hol...
International relations theory has borrowed important intuitions from Olson’s static public-goods mo...
This paper studies how organizations seek to promote cooperation between their members when individu...
This paper examines the impact of policymakers' horizon on the sustainability of international coope...
In a model of repeated games, we determine the conditions under which cooperation is an equilibrium ...
Abstract We analyze institutional solutions to international cooperation when actors have heterogene...
One of the few stylized facts in international relations is that democracies, unlike autocracies, al...
This is the author accepted manuscriptSustaining future generations requires cooperation today. Whil...
Recent works have suggested that most games arising in climate change diplomacy and sustainability c...
One of the few stylized facts in international relations is that democracies, unlike autocracies, al...
International climate policies are being shaped in a process of ongoing negotiations. This paper dev...
One of the few stylized facts in international relations is that democracies, unlike autocracies, al...
Veto player theory argues that a higher number of veto players lowers the likelihood of change; in t...
We study the impact of altruism on the stability of international climate agreements. We consider th...
We extend a simple repeated, multilateral bargaining model to allow successful agenda setters to hol...
International relations theory has borrowed important intuitions from Olson’s static public-goods mo...
This paper studies how organizations seek to promote cooperation between their members when individu...
This paper examines the impact of policymakers' horizon on the sustainability of international coope...
In a model of repeated games, we determine the conditions under which cooperation is an equilibrium ...
Abstract We analyze institutional solutions to international cooperation when actors have heterogene...
One of the few stylized facts in international relations is that democracies, unlike autocracies, al...
This is the author accepted manuscriptSustaining future generations requires cooperation today. Whil...
Recent works have suggested that most games arising in climate change diplomacy and sustainability c...
One of the few stylized facts in international relations is that democracies, unlike autocracies, al...
International climate policies are being shaped in a process of ongoing negotiations. This paper dev...
One of the few stylized facts in international relations is that democracies, unlike autocracies, al...
Veto player theory argues that a higher number of veto players lowers the likelihood of change; in t...
We study the impact of altruism on the stability of international climate agreements. We consider th...
We extend a simple repeated, multilateral bargaining model to allow successful agenda setters to hol...
International relations theory has borrowed important intuitions from Olson’s static public-goods mo...
This paper studies how organizations seek to promote cooperation between their members when individu...