Corruption drives the emergence of civil society

Author:

Abdallah Sherief123,Sayed Rasha1,Rahwan Iyad24,LeVeck Brad L.5,Cebrian Manuel67,Rutherford Alex48,Fowler James H.5

Affiliation:

1. Informatics Department, The British University in Dubai, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

2. School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

3. Faculty of Computers and Information, Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt

4. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Masdar Institute of Science and Technology, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

5. Political Science Department, University of California, San Diego, CA, USA

6. National Information and Communications Technology Australia, Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia

7. Department of Computing and Information Systems, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia

8. United Nations Global Pulse

Abstract

Centralized sanctioning institutions have been shown to emerge naturally through social learning, displace all other forms of punishment and lead to stable cooperation. However, this result provokes a number of questions. If centralized sanctioning is so successful, then why do many highly authoritarian states suffer from low levels of cooperation? Why do states with high levels of public good provision tend to rely more on citizen-driven peer punishment? Here, we consider how corruption influences the evolution of cooperation and punishment. Our model shows that the effectiveness of centralized punishment in promoting cooperation breaks down when some actors in the model are allowed to bribe centralized authorities. Counterintuitively, a weaker centralized authority is actually more effective because it allows peer punishment to restore cooperation in the presence of corruption. Our results provide an evolutionary rationale for why public goods provision rarely flourishes in polities that rely only on strong centralized institutions. Instead, cooperation requires both decentralized and centralized enforcement. These results help to explain why citizen participation is a fundamental necessity for policing the commons.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Biochemistry,Biomaterials,Bioengineering,Biophysics,Biotechnology

Reference36 articles.

1. The tragedy of the commons;Hardin G;Science,1968

2. The Struggle to Govern the Commons

3. Five Rules for the Evolution of Cooperation

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