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Game theory and Canadian politicsGame theory and Canadian politics

Game theory and Canadian politics

Thomas Flanagan

About this book

This is the first book-length application of game theory to Canadian politics. It uses a series of case studies to illustrate fundamental concepts of game theory such as two-person and n-person games, the Nash equilibrium, zero-sum and variable-sum games, the paradox of voting, the Condorcet winner, the Condorcet extension, the Banzhaf power index, and spatial models of competition. No mathematics more complex than simple algebra is required to follow the exposition. This book is intended to show what game theory can add to the philosophical, institutional, and behavioural approaches that have dominated previous works on Canadian politics.

Details

OL Work ID
OL780327W

Subjects

Game theoryMethodologyPolitical sciencePolitics and governmentCanada, politics and government

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Open Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.