COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Stone Lectures > Sir Richard Stone Annual Lecture: The Emergence of Weak, Despotic and Inclusive States
Sir Richard Stone Annual Lecture: The Emergence of Weak, Despotic and Inclusive StatesAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Dawn Bradley. Societies under similar geographic and economic conditions and subject to similar external influences nonetheless develop very different types of states. At one extreme are weak states with little capacity and ability to regulate economic or social relations. At the other are despotic states which dominate civil society. Yet there are others which are locked into an ongoing competition with civil society and it is these, not the despotic ones, that develop the greatest capacity. We develop a dynamic contest model of the potential competition between state (controlled by a ruler or a group of elites) and civil society (representing non-elite citizens), where both players can invest to increase their power. The model leads to different types of steady states depending on initial conditions. One type of steady state, corresponding to a weak state, emerges when civil society is strong relative to the state (e.g., having developed social norms limiting political hierarchy). Another type of steady state, corresponding to a despotic state, originates from initial conditions where the state is powerful and civil society is weak. A third type of steady state, which we refer to as an inclusive state, emerges when state and civil society are more evenly matched. In this case, each party has greater incentives to invest to keep up with the other, and this leads to the most powerful and capable type of state, while simultaneously incentivizing civil society to be equally powerful as well. Our framework highlights that comparative statics with respect to structural factors such as geography, economic conditions or external threats, are conditional — in the sense that depending on initial conditions they can shift a society into or out of the basin of attraction of the inclusive state. This talk is part of the Stone Lectures series. This talk is included in these lists:Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsTranslating genomics Virginia Woolf Talks, Lucy Cavendish College Type the title of a new list hereOther talksA unifying theory of branching morphogenesis CANCELLED in solidarity with strike action: Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources and the Unsettling of Mainstream Narratives of International Legal History Phylogenetic hypothesis of the Oleeae tribe (Oleaceae) Diversification and molecular evolution patterns in plastid and nuclear ribosomal DNA Panel comparisons: Challenor, Ginsbourger, Nobile, Teckentrup and Beck Leveraging the imaging power of the Beacon platform Chains and Invisible Threads: Marx on Republican Liberty and Domination |