24,454 research outputs found
Revisiting Ruddick: Feminism, pacifism and non-violence
This article explores feminist contentions over pacifism and non-violence in the contextof the Greenham Common Peace Camp in the 1980s and later developments offeminist Just War Theory. We argue that Sara Ruddick’s work puts feminist pacifism, its radical feminist critics and feminist just war theory equally into question. Although Ruddick does not resolve the contestations within feminism over peace, violence and the questions of war, she offers a productive way of holding the tension between them. In our judgment, her work is helpful not only for developing a feminist political response to the threats and temptations of violent strategies but also for thinking through the question of the relation between violence and politics as such
Refining and Delegating Strategic Ability in ATL
We propose extending Alternating-time Temporal Logic (ATL) by an operator <i
refines-to G> F to express that agent i can distribute its powers to a set of
sub-agents G in a way which satisfies ATL condition f on the strategic ability
of the coalitions they may form, possibly together with others agents. We prove
the decidability of model-checking of formulas whose subformulas with this
operator as the main connective have the form ...<i_m
refines-to G_m> f, with no further occurrences of this operator in f.Comment: In Proceedings SR 2014, arXiv:1404.041
Games on graphs with a public signal monitoring
We study pure Nash equilibria in games on graphs with an imperfect monitoring
based on a public signal. In such games, deviations and players responsible for
those deviations can be hard to detect and track. We propose a generic
epistemic game abstraction, which conveniently allows to represent the
knowledge of the players about these deviations, and give a characterization of
Nash equilibria in terms of winning strategies in the abstraction. We then use
the abstraction to develop algorithms for some payoff functions.Comment: 28 page
EVOLUTIONARY STABLE PROPERTIES OF POLITICAL PARTIES IN INDONESIA
The major idea is to use memetics as an analytical tool on viewing how the existing political parties towards General Election 2004 creating formation of their presidential candidacy, ideology behind it, the change of political atmosphere it will bring, etc. into a compact evolutionary model that exhibits fitness of each political party within population of a society. The strategy used is through transforming polling statistical language into evolutionary stable language of dynamical system. Here, memetic method is applied as an evolutionary computational tool
Multilevel governance patterns and the protection of groundwater and drinking water in Florida and the Netherlands
This paper develops a model of ‘governance’ as an aid for comparing such\ud
governance structures and applies these to a particular policy arena: policies\ud
on the protection of groundwater and on drinking water quality in the\ud
Netherlands and Florida.\ud
The research questions examined by this paper are:\ud
1. Which elements make up a governance structure?\ud
2. In what ways do these elements influence each other?\ud
3. What are the differences between the multilevel structure of protection for\ud
aquifers in Florida and the Netherlands, and how do these differences\ud
relate to other differences in the governance structure?\ud
The analysis in this paper has shown that ‘governance’ involves more\ud
elements than policy objectives and the means to implement policy. These\ud
elements are not simply the sum of individual aspects but are closely\ud
interlinked. We have tried to illustrate how these interrelations work. The case\ud
study we used for this was the comparison between the Netherlands and\ud
Florida regarding the protection of the quality of groundwater and drinking\ud
water. The high degree of similarity between both states highlights the\ud
differences, which exist as well. The interrelations between these differences\ud
can be understood by using our hypotheses of the mechanisms by which they\ud
work
Applications of Negotiation Theory to Water Issues
The purpose of the paper is to review the applications of non-cooperative bargaining theory to water related issues – which fall in the category of formal models of negotiation. The ultimate aim is that to, on the one hand, identify the conditions under which agreements are likely to emerge, and their characteristics; and, on the other hand, to support policy makers in devising the “rules of the game” that could help obtain a desired result. Despite the fact that allocation of natural resources, especially of trans-boundary nature, has all the characteristics of a negotiation problem, there are not many applications of formal negotiation theory to the issue. Therefore, this paper first discusses the non-cooperative bargaining models applied to water allocation problems found in the literature. Particular attention will be given to those directly modelling the process of negotiation, although some attempts at finding strategies to maintain the efficient allocation solution will also be illustrated. In addition, this paper will focus on Negotiation Support Systems (NSS), developed to support the process of negotiation. This field of research is still relatively new, however, and NSS have not yet found much use in real life negotiation. The paper will conclude by highlighting the key remaining gaps in the literature.Negotiation theory, Water, Agreeements, Stochasticity, Stakeholders
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Verbal Abuse: Anti-Trafficking Rhetoric and Violence Against Women
There is a significant debate in contemporary feminist political thought and amongst activist
organizations regarding the “trafficking of women” and the questions and problems attendant to
this phenomenon. Furthermore, the work of many feminist groups now concerned with and often
party to the exercise of state and international regulatory power has drawn a great deal of attention
to trafficking within the United Nations, individual nation-states (particularly the United States) and
a slew of increasingly powerful NGOs. These different organizations all operate at a similar
structural and prescriptive level, using legal and normative models to enact protocols and legislation
specifically naming, defining and acting on human trafficking. Regardless of the apparent fervor and
media attention given to trafficking in recent years, the problem is still widespread, and there is
significant criticism of existing trafficking models, both for their failure to achieve even stated goals,
and for the way their definitions of trafficking – particularly sex trafficking – affect women.La
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