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Crisis Bargaining Game×Bargaining Model of War×
FachgebietInternational RelationsInternational Relations
FamilieMCDMMCDM
Entstehungsjahr19941995
UrheberFormalized by James Fearon and others (building on Schelling)James D. Fearon
TypExtensive-form game of sequential crisis escalationFormal model of war as bargaining failure
Wegweisende QuelleFearon, J. D. (1994). Domestic political audiences and the escalation of international disputes. American Political Science Review, 88(3), 577–592. DOI ↗Fearon, J. D. (1995). Rationalist explanations for war. International Organization, 49(3), 379–414. DOI ↗
AliasnamenInternational Crisis Game, Escalation Game, Signaling Game of Crisis Bargaining, Deterrence Crisis GameRationalist Explanations for War, Bargaining Theory of War, Crisis Bargaining Model, Fearon Bargaining Model
Verwandt33
ZusammenfassungA 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.The bargaining model of war, given its canonical statement by James Fearon in 'Rationalist Explanations for War' (1995), treats war not as the failure of reason but as a failure of bargaining. Because fighting is costly and uncertain, there almost always exists a peaceful division of the disputed stakes that both rational states would prefer to the gamble of war. The puzzle, and the model's central contribution, is to identify the specific conditions — private information with incentives to misrepresent, commitment problems, and issue indivisibility — under which rational, unitary states nonetheless fail to reach such a settlement.
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ScholarGateMethoden vergleichen: Crisis Bargaining Game · Bargaining Model of War. Abgerufen am 2026-06-25 von https://scholargate.app/de/compare