One major problem in global governance is the specification of decision-making rules for international and regional organisations to coordinate the states of the world. Various organisations use different decision-making rules, and the properties of these rules may be compared systematically in terms of the power index approach. The power index solution concept of N-person games may be employed to display a basic problem in global governance, namely, the fundamental trade-off between state veto on the one hand and the capacity of the organisation or groups of states to act, meaning its decisiveness, on the other hand. Thus, when states coordinate through the setting up and running of international organisations, they then face a trade-off b...
Coordination among different options is key for a functioning and efficient society. However, often ...
This Working Paper was presented at the international workshop "Game Theory in International Relatio...
The debate on access and exclusion in global governance should move beyond the analysis of instituti...
The period of globalisation has seen more and more of international and regional organisation. Setti...
Game theory presents a useful analytical tool for addressing the problem of international cooperatio...
The developments over a thirty-year time span in the study of power, especially voting power, are tr...
International organizations use a variety of voting procedures. Some of these procedures are based o...
International organizations use a variety of voting procedures. Some of these procedures are based o...
This paper proposes a brief review of the use of power indices in the corporate governance literatur...
This survey article starts with a game-theory interpretation of coordination problems that occur in ...
While cross-sector partnerships are sometimes depicted as a pragmatic problem solving arrangements d...
A survey of the current relationship between the many different problem areas investigated by means ...
Contains fulltext : 181214pub.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Multistake...
Governance can be defined as a process of negotiation among different bundles of interests in which ...
While cross-sector partnerships are sometimes depicted as a pragmatic problem solving arrangements d...
Coordination among different options is key for a functioning and efficient society. However, often ...
This Working Paper was presented at the international workshop "Game Theory in International Relatio...
The debate on access and exclusion in global governance should move beyond the analysis of instituti...
The period of globalisation has seen more and more of international and regional organisation. Setti...
Game theory presents a useful analytical tool for addressing the problem of international cooperatio...
The developments over a thirty-year time span in the study of power, especially voting power, are tr...
International organizations use a variety of voting procedures. Some of these procedures are based o...
International organizations use a variety of voting procedures. Some of these procedures are based o...
This paper proposes a brief review of the use of power indices in the corporate governance literatur...
This survey article starts with a game-theory interpretation of coordination problems that occur in ...
While cross-sector partnerships are sometimes depicted as a pragmatic problem solving arrangements d...
A survey of the current relationship between the many different problem areas investigated by means ...
Contains fulltext : 181214pub.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Multistake...
Governance can be defined as a process of negotiation among different bundles of interests in which ...
While cross-sector partnerships are sometimes depicted as a pragmatic problem solving arrangements d...
Coordination among different options is key for a functioning and efficient society. However, often ...
This Working Paper was presented at the international workshop "Game Theory in International Relatio...
The debate on access and exclusion in global governance should move beyond the analysis of instituti...