On Legitimacy Feedback Mechanisms in Agent-Based Modeling of Civil Violence
Authored by Carlos Lemos, Rui Jorge Lopes, Helder Coelho
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1002/int.21747
Sponsors:
Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT)
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
ODD
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Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Epstein's agent-based model (ABM) of civil violence has been very
popular and successful due to its formulation soundness, simplicity, and
explanatory power. Variants of this model have been proposed for the
simulation of different types of social conflict phenomena (worker
protest, riots, or urban crime) and for investigating the effect of
mechanisms that are not considered in the original model. In a previous
work, we introduced imprisonment delay, news impact, and legitimacy
feedback effects in Epstein's ABM of civil violence. In this paper, we
focused specifically on improving the formulation of legitimacy
feedback. In the model presented herein, legitimacy varies as a function
of subindicators identified in theoretical studies on legitimacy
measurement. We considered four different functions for expressing the
legitimacyweighted average, geometric mean, exponentially decaying
system support, and justificationand two different feedback mechanisms:
homogeneous (global) perceived legitimacy and heterogeneous
(agent-dependent) perceived legitimacy. It was found that, for certain
combinations of input parameters, the present model produced solutions
with an initial period of calm with small bursts of rebellion, followed
by a sudden large-scale rebellion after which intermittent bursts of
rebellion occur (as in Epstein's model), where legitimacy drops never
returning to the initial level. These results provide an alternative
explanation of the mechanisms by which apparently stable authoritarian
regimes, when facing an unexpected large-scale uprising, respond with
repression and afterward struggle with intermittent bursts of rebellion
because they are perceived as illegitimate. The present model can also
be used to test theories on the aggregation of legitimacy indicators in
a global legitimacy score. (C) 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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