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Do Exploitive Agents Benefit from Asymmetric Power in International Politics?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 August 2005

STEPHEN J. MAJESKI
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, University of Washington.

Abstract

Endowing agents that prefer co-operative outcomes with asymmetric power substantially increases the chances that both co-operative agents survive and that co-operative worlds evolve across a variety of structural settings of conflict and co-operation present in international relations; particularly when agents are endowed with the ability to selectively interact with other agents. These results are consistent with the general finding that non-compulsory play consistently helps co-operators. The question addressed in this analysis is whether or not asymmetric power also helps exploitive agents in the same structural settings; a question heretofore not analysed. Contrary to expectations, the simulation results reported here suggest that exploitive agents benefit from asymmetric power only in very restricted circumstances – circumstances relatively unlikely to occur in international relations. In effect, there is an asymmetry in the benefits of asymmetric power.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2005 Cambridge University Press

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