GeoContest Modeling Strategic Competition in Geopolitical Systems

The authors present GeoContest, a modeling framework for geopolitical competition among states. Building on the Geosim model, GeoContest models the evolution of state systems through conquest. However, instead of hard wiring the strategic behavior of states, GeoContest allows for their decision-making mechanism to be plugged into the simulation as a module. Thus, experiments with states' strategic behavior can be performed. This article gives a nontechnical introduction to GeoContest, outlining the design and illustrating application. The authors start with tournaments using simple aggressive and peaceful strategies showing that greed for conquest does not pay off and successful attackers have to carefully examine their own and the opponents' capabilities. They also demonstrate that relying on nonaggression pacts can successfully compete against a cautious aggressor strategy. In a final series of experiments, the authors examine the question of whether artificial state actors overestimating their military capabilities have a selective advantage in the international competition, as suggested in the literature.

[1]  Dominic D. P. Johnson Overconfidence and War: The Havoc and Glory of Positive Illusions , 2004 .

[2]  J. Fearon Rationalist explanations for war , 1995, International Organization.

[3]  B A Huberman,et al.  Evolutionary games and computer simulations. , 1993, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[4]  J. Hirshleifer The Dark Side of the Force: Economic Foundations of Conflict Theory , 2001 .

[5]  L. Cederman Modeling the Size of Wars: From Billiard Balls to Sandpiles , 2003, American Political Science Review.

[6]  Lars-Erik Cederman,et al.  Endogenizing geopolitical boundaries with agent-based modeling , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[7]  L. Cederman Back to Kant: Reinterpreting the Democratic Peace as a Macrohistorical Learning Process , 2001, American Political Science Review.

[8]  David Lazer,et al.  Emergent Actors in World Politics: How States and Nations Develop by Lars-Erik Cederman , 2001, J. Artif. Soc. Soc. Simul..

[9]  Charles Tilly,et al.  The Formation of National States in Western Europe , 1976 .