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Deterrence Modeling×Richardson Arms Race Model×
FagfeltInternational RelationsInternational Relations
FamilieMCDMMCDM
Opprinnelsesår20001960
OpphavspersonClassical deterrence theorists (Schelling); formal perfect deterrence by Frank Zagare & D. Marc KilgourLewis Fry Richardson
TypeGame-theoretic model of threat-based conflict preventionCoupled linear differential-equation dynamic model
Opprinnelig kildeZagare, F. C., & Kilgour, D. M. (2000). Perfect Deterrence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. link ↗Richardson, L. F. (1960). Arms and Insecurity: A Mathematical Study of the Causes and Origins of War (N. Rashevsky & E. Trucco, Eds.). Pittsburgh: Boxwood Press; Chicago: Quadrangle Books. link ↗
AliasDeterrence Theory Modeling, Rational Deterrence Models, Perfect Deterrence Game, Extended Deterrence AnalysisRichardson Arms Race Equations, Arms Race Dynamics Model, Action-Reaction Arms Model, Richardson Model of Arms Competition
Relaterte33
SammendragDeterrence modeling uses game theory to analyze when a defender can dissuade a challenger from aggression by threatening unacceptable costs. Classical deterrence theory, rooted in Schelling's work and Cold War nuclear strategy, was reformulated by Frank Zagare and D. Marc Kilgour in Perfect Deterrence (2000) into a family of incomplete-information games. These models make precise the two requirements a deterrent threat must meet — capability (the means to inflict the cost) and credibility (a genuine willingness to carry it out) — and identify the equilibrium conditions under which deterrence succeeds, fails, or collapses into conflict.The Richardson arms race model, set out by Lewis Fry Richardson in Arms and Insecurity (1960), is a pair of coupled differential equations describing how two rival states adjust their armaments over time. Each state's rate of arming rises with the rival's level of arms (action–reaction fear), falls with the burden of its own existing arms (fatigue or economic constraint), and is shifted by underlying grievance or goodwill. Analyzing the system reveals whether an arms race converges to a stable equilibrium or spirals upward without bound, making it the foundational mathematical model of arms competition.
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ScholarGateSammenlign metoder: Deterrence Modeling · Richardson Arms Race Model. Hentet 2026-06-25 fra https://scholargate.app/no/compare