Document Type
Honors Project
Publication Date
6-1-2016
Abstract
This paper works toward analyzing international justice disputes, through a game theoretic lens. The result of such an analysis is an accurate working model for the international justice dispute resolution process, limiting its scope to those disputes that fall under the International Court of Justice’s jurisdiction post 1986. This time limitation on the explanatory power of the model was deduced from all of the court’s findings since its inception. The game can be formed in four ways: perfect information, incomplete information, no information, and partial information, all of which have their own unique equilibria, which are formed and discussed individually.
Level of Honors
cum laude
Department
Economics
Advisor
Adam Galambos
Recommended Citation
Ayaz, Mishal, "A Game Theoretic Analysis of International Justice Disputes" (2016). Lawrence University Honors Projects. 89.
https://lux.lawrence.edu/luhp/89