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Designing for cooperation: cooperating in design [PDF]
This article will discuss how to design computer applications that enhance the quality of work and products, and will relate the discussion to current themes in the field of Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW). Cooperation is a key element of computer use and work practice, yet here a specific “CSCW approach is not taken.” Instead the focus is ...
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Games and Economic Behavior, 2015
There is a large repeated games literature illustrating how future interactions provide incentives for cooperation. Much of the earlier literature assumes public monitoring. Departures from public monitoring to private monitoring that incorporate differences in players' observations may dramatically complicate coordination and the provision of ...
Compte, Olivier, Postlewaite, Andrew
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There is a large repeated games literature illustrating how future interactions provide incentives for cooperation. Much of the earlier literature assumes public monitoring. Departures from public monitoring to private monitoring that incorporate differences in players' observations may dramatically complicate coordination and the provision of ...
Compte, Olivier, Postlewaite, Andrew
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From Cooperation to Cooperability
2008In many countries of the European Union the system of Local Government is highly fragmented and characterized by the prevalence of small municipalities. By allowing the sharing of resources within an aggregation of municipalities, inter-municipal cooperation could be a solution for some of the problems related to administrative fragmentation.
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Agricultural Cooperatives and Cooperative Law
2005The paper analyses the advantages and weakpoints of cooperatives, especially in agriculture, as they are identified by the contemporary cooperative theory. The theoretical findings are connected with the comparative survey of recent developments of the cooperative law, where the draft new model law on agricultural cooperatives in USA, the Regulation No.
Avsec, Franci+3 more
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When isolated communities get in contact with more developed economic institutions an internal breakdown of cooperation typically occurs. Why do money and markets crowd out cooperative relations? I propose a new theoretical explanation of this phenomenon based on the interaction between players' aversion to intertemporal substitution, their ability to ...
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Non-Cooperation and Cooperation
1982The purpose of this paper is to survey the development of two strands in game theory over the past three decades, and show how some of the game-theoretical concepts and tools have provided mathematical foundations for economic analysis.
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Erkenntnis, 1993
According to individualistic ethical doctrines, moral norms are applicable only to individual agents. No moral norms apply to groups of agents. Thus, according to what might be called Individual Egoism, each (individual) agent ought to maximize his utility and there is nothing that a group of agents ought (or ought not) to ...
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According to individualistic ethical doctrines, moral norms are applicable only to individual agents. No moral norms apply to groups of agents. Thus, according to what might be called Individual Egoism, each (individual) agent ought to maximize his utility and there is nothing that a group of agents ought (or ought not) to ...
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SSRN Electronic Journal, 2018
Group tasks are often organized by a list: group members state their willingness to contribute by entering their names on a publicly visible, empty list. Alternatively, one could organize the group task by starting with a full list: every group member is already entered on the list and non-cooperators have to cross out their names.
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Group tasks are often organized by a list: group members state their willingness to contribute by entering their names on a publicly visible, empty list. Alternatively, one could organize the group task by starting with a full list: every group member is already entered on the list and non-cooperators have to cross out their names.
openaire +4 more sources