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Audience Cost Analysis×Crisis Bargaining Game×
CampInternational RelationsInternational Relations
FamíliaMCDMMCDM
Any d'origen19941994
Autor originalJames D. FearonFormalized by James Fearon and others (building on Schelling)
TipusFormal signaling mechanism in crisis bargainingExtensive-form game of sequential crisis escalation
Font seminalFearon, J. D. (1994). Domestic political audiences and the escalation of international disputes. American Political Science Review, 88(3), 577–592. DOI ↗Fearon, J. D. (1994). Domestic political audiences and the escalation of international disputes. American Political Science Review, 88(3), 577–592. DOI ↗
ÀliesAudience Costs Theory, Domestic Audience Cost Model, Tying-Hands Signaling, Audience Cost MechanismInternational Crisis Game, Escalation Game, Signaling Game of Crisis Bargaining, Deterrence Crisis Game
Relacionats33
ResumAudience cost analysis studies how the domestic political punishment a leader expects for publicly backing down from an international threat makes that threat credible. Introduced formally by James Fearon (1994), the mechanism explains why a leader who escalates a crisis in public ties their own hands: retreating would expose them to costs imposed by domestic audiences for looking weak or incompetent. These accumulating audience costs let states signal resolve, and because democracies can generate larger and more reliable audience costs, the concept underpins prominent arguments about regime type, crisis behavior, and the democratic peace.A crisis bargaining game is a formal, usually extensive-form model in which two states sequentially choose to challenge, escalate, stand firm, or back down during an international dispute, and the analyst solves for the equilibrium pattern of escalation and concession. Building on Schelling's strategy of conflict and given an influential treatment in Fearon's (1994) model of escalation as a war of attrition, these games make explicit how incomplete information about each side's resolve, and the costs each pays for backing down, shape whether a crisis ends in mutual accommodation, capitulation, or war.
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ScholarGateCompara mètodes: Audience Cost Analysis · Crisis Bargaining Game. Recuperat el 2026-06-25 de https://scholargate.app/ca/compare