The emergence of attractors under multi-level institutional designs: agent-based modeling of intergovernmental decision making for funding transportation projects
Authored by Asim Zia, Christopher Koliba
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1007/s00146-013-0527-2
Sponsors:
United States Department of Transportation
Platforms:
Java
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
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Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Multi-level institutional designs with distributed power and authority
arrangements among federal, state, regional, and local government
agencies could lead to the emergence of differential patterns of
socioeconomic and infrastructure development pathways in complex
social-ecological systems. Both exogenous drivers and endogenous
processes in social-ecological systems can lead to changes in the number
of ``basins of attraction,{''} changes in the positions of the basins
within the state space, and changes in the positions of the thresholds
between basins. In an effort to advance the theory and practice of the
governance of policy systems, this study addresses a narrower empirical
question: how do intergovernmental institutional rules set by federal, state, and regional government agencies generate and sustain basins of
attraction in funding infrastructure projects? A pattern-oriented, agent-based model (ABM) of an intergovernmental network has been
developed to simulate real-world transportation policy implementation
processes across the federal, the state of Vermont, regional, and local
governments for prioritizing transportation projects. The ABM simulates
baseline and alternative intergovernmental institutional rule structures
and assesses their impacts on financial investment flows. The ABM was
calibrated with data from multiple focus groups, individual interviews, and analysis of federal, state, and regional scale transportation
projects and programs. The results from experimental simulations are
presented to test system-wide effects of alternative multi-level
institutional designs, in particular different power and authority
arrangements between state and regional governments, on the emergence of
roadway project prioritization patterns and funding allocations across
regions and towns.
Tags
Network
governance
systems
Basins