Institutions
In: Annales: histoire, sciences sociales, Band 7, Heft 2, S. 247-248
ISSN: 1953-8146
315471 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Annales: histoire, sciences sociales, Band 7, Heft 2, S. 247-248
ISSN: 1953-8146
In: Pragmatist DemocracyEvolutionary Learning as Public Philosophy, S. 22-42
In: Demokratie und Demokratiemessung, S. 126-226
In: Cooperation and conflict: journal of the Nordic International Studies Association, Band 30, Heft 1, S. 83-95
ISSN: 1460-3691
In: Cooperation and conflict: journal of the Nordic International Studies Association, Band 30, Heft 1, S. 83
ISSN: 0010-8367
In: Handbuch Transformationsforschung, S. 47-62
In: Handbuch Transformationsforschung, S. 47-62
In: Doing Political Science and International Relations, S. 111-132
In: The International Climate Change Regime, S. 398-430
In: Isiksel, Turkuler (2014). "International Institutions," in The Encyclopedia of Political Thought, ed. Michael T. Gibbons et al. Wiley-Blackwell.
SSRN
In: https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:46ce0064-5dac-4278-8d48-6e1fc8629a14
Norms guide multi-agent systems away from being potentially anarchic towards a coordinated and collaborative society. Institutions provide an explicit, external representation of norms as well as the means to detect violations and other conditions. Each institution can be crafted individually to capture their designers' goals, but this creates a challenge at higher levels of authority in guiding the institutional design to be coordinated with other institutions and not imposing unacceptable limits on agents' rights. We propose to use institutions to govern and to revise institutions, following a principle widely encountered in the social world, where treaties, primary legislation, framework agreements and subsidiarity establish a regulatory space by defining norms on the form of a body of regulation. We set out a formal and computational framework, building on the InstAL model and implementation, to construct tiers of institutions, where the norms at each tier are governed by those at the tier above. Thus, agents' behaviour is governed and monitored by a tier-1 institution, whose norms are governed and monitored by a tier-2 institution, etc. This allows us to check the compliance of an institution with the tier above. Compliance failure generates the necessary negative examples for automatic norm-revision.
BASE
In: Histoire des institutions françaises au moyen age 3
In: Année politique suisse: Schweizerische Politik, Band 49, S. 49
ISSN: 0066-2372