Horizon 2020 (2014 - 2020)

The Political Economy of Power Relations: PolEc

Last update: May 11, 2021 Last update: May 11, 2021

Details

Locations:Italy
Start Date:Sep 1, 2016
End Date:Feb 28, 2022
Contract value: EUR 1,540,625
Sectors:Macro-Econ. & Public Finance, Public Administratio ...
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Macro-Econ. & Public Finance, Public Administration, Research
Categories:Grants
Date posted:May 11, 2021

Associated funding

Associated experts

Description

Programme(s): H2020-EU.1.1. - EXCELLENT SCIENCE - European Research Council (ERC)

Topic(s): 
ERC-ADG-2015 - ERC Advanced Grant

Call for proposal: 
ERC-2015-AdG

Funding Scheme: 
ERC-ADG - Advanced Grant

Grant agreement ID: 694583

Objective:

Political economists want to understand conflict, electoral competition, special interest politics, regimes and institutional choices, and in all these subfields the term power appears frequently: power of countries, power of ethnic groups, power of interest groups, power of parties, power of the bureaucracy.
Power is multidimensional and endogenous, and hence the standard theoretical and empirical analysis that takes a unified notion of power as an independent variable has led to wrong directions.
By acknowledging that power is multidimensional and endogenous, and thereby studying the endogenous interactions between the different types of power, we can further significantly the frontier of political economy.
In particular, the fellow is going to show, theoretically and empirically, that all kinds of conflict, from civil war to interstate war and even class conflict, depend on the “mismatch” between the relative power of the key players on different dimensions, for example military and political power.
An important byproduct of the mismatch theory is for the interpretation of the history of conflict after 1950:
He claims that it is Bretton Woods that created the ground for a significant discontinuity, cutting down the incentives to interstate wars but increasing the incentives to start civil wars.
Finally, the general idea that the dynamics of one type of power can depend significantly on relative power in other spheres will be applied also to the relationship between political power and the power of bureaucracies.
The empirical part of the project will involve new measurements of power and will benefit from collection of data on political texts, policy platform texts, legal texts and economic strength of ethnic groups over time and cross-countries.

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