The Refugee Game: The Relationship between Individual Security Expenditures and Collective Security

This paper studies a three player hierarchical differential game (with a large country, a small country, and a terrorist organization), to analyze the actual European refugee situation. Terrorists may enter Europe as refugees, taking advantage of the Open Door Policy, to attack both countries. There...

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Main Authors: João Ricardo Faria, Andreas Novak, Aniruddha Bagchi, Timothy Mathews
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-06-01
Series:Games
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4336/11/2/24
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spelling doaj-3216562c43cd4068a1ea5a9cfb4a79052020-11-25T02:39:16ZengMDPI AGGames2073-43362020-06-0111242410.3390/g11020024The Refugee Game: The Relationship between Individual Security Expenditures and Collective SecurityJoão Ricardo Faria0Andreas Novak1Aniruddha Bagchi2Timothy Mathews3Department of Economics, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL 33431, USADepartment of Business Decisions and Analytics, University of Vienna, 1090 Vienna, AustriaDepartment of Economics, Finance, and Quantitative Analysis, Kennesaw State University, Kennesaw, GA 30144, USADepartment of Economics, Finance, and Quantitative Analysis, Kennesaw State University, Kennesaw, GA 30144, USAThis paper studies a three player hierarchical differential game (with a large country, a small country, and a terrorist organization), to analyze the actual European refugee situation. Terrorists may enter Europe as refugees, taking advantage of the Open Door Policy, to attack both countries. There are two scenarios: myopia and full awareness. Countries are myopic when they ignore each other’s security efforts, and the terrorist group only considers the weakest link’s security efforts. A comparison between the scenarios shows that for an extremely impatient large country, full awareness yields a greater level of security effort for the large country, a greater level of security effort for the small country, and more terrorist attacks. This is, however, an unstable equilibrium. The full awareness model with a patient large country is stable and lies in between the previous model and the myopic model. Although it yields larger investments in security, this still results in more terrorist attacks than the myopic model. Continental safety is higher in the myopic model than in the full awareness model.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4336/11/2/24differential gameterrorismrefugee crisisexternalitiesinternational public goods
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author João Ricardo Faria
Andreas Novak
Aniruddha Bagchi
Timothy Mathews
spellingShingle João Ricardo Faria
Andreas Novak
Aniruddha Bagchi
Timothy Mathews
The Refugee Game: The Relationship between Individual Security Expenditures and Collective Security
Games
differential game
terrorism
refugee crisis
externalities
international public goods
author_facet João Ricardo Faria
Andreas Novak
Aniruddha Bagchi
Timothy Mathews
author_sort João Ricardo Faria
title The Refugee Game: The Relationship between Individual Security Expenditures and Collective Security
title_short The Refugee Game: The Relationship between Individual Security Expenditures and Collective Security
title_full The Refugee Game: The Relationship between Individual Security Expenditures and Collective Security
title_fullStr The Refugee Game: The Relationship between Individual Security Expenditures and Collective Security
title_full_unstemmed The Refugee Game: The Relationship between Individual Security Expenditures and Collective Security
title_sort refugee game: the relationship between individual security expenditures and collective security
publisher MDPI AG
series Games
issn 2073-4336
publishDate 2020-06-01
description This paper studies a three player hierarchical differential game (with a large country, a small country, and a terrorist organization), to analyze the actual European refugee situation. Terrorists may enter Europe as refugees, taking advantage of the Open Door Policy, to attack both countries. There are two scenarios: myopia and full awareness. Countries are myopic when they ignore each other’s security efforts, and the terrorist group only considers the weakest link’s security efforts. A comparison between the scenarios shows that for an extremely impatient large country, full awareness yields a greater level of security effort for the large country, a greater level of security effort for the small country, and more terrorist attacks. This is, however, an unstable equilibrium. The full awareness model with a patient large country is stable and lies in between the previous model and the myopic model. Although it yields larger investments in security, this still results in more terrorist attacks than the myopic model. Continental safety is higher in the myopic model than in the full awareness model.
topic differential game
terrorism
refugee crisis
externalities
international public goods
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4336/11/2/24
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