Politics, Strategy, and Game Theory Course

Politics, Strategy, and Game Theory

Kathleen Bawn
UCLA

Course Description

This course is an introduction to study of strategic interaction in political applications. Use of game theory and other formal modeling strategies to understand politics are also studied in order to gain a better understanding of politics at large.

Lectures

  1. Sequential Games: Look Forward, Reason Backward (1 of 5) Lecture favorites
  2. Sequential Games: Look Forward, Reason Backward (2 of 5) Lecture favorites
  3. Sequential Games: Look Forward, Reason Backward (3 of 5) Lecture favorites
  4. Sequential Games: Look Forward, Reason Backward (4 of 5) Lecture favorites
  5. Sequential Games: Look Forward, Reason Backward (5 of 5) Lecture favorites
  6. Simultaneous Move Games: No Regrets (1 of 4) Lecture favorites
  7. Simultaneous Move Games: No Regrets (2 of 4) Lecture favorites
  8. Simultaneous Move Games: No Regrets (3 of 4) Lecture favorites
  9. Simultaneous Move Games: No Regrets (4 of 4) Lecture favorites
  10. Mixed Strategy Equilibrium: Be Unpredictable (1 of 4) Lecture favorites
  11. Mixed Strategy Equilibrium: Be Unpredictable (2 of 4) Lecture favorites
  12. Mixed Strategy Equilibrium: Be Unpredictable (3 of 4) Lecture favorites
  13. Mixed Strategy Equilibrium: Be Unpredictable (4 of 4) Lecture favorites
  14. Repeated Interaction: Strategy in the “Shadow of the Future” (1 of 4) Lecture favorites
  15. Repeated Interaction: Strategy in the “Shadow of the Future” (2 of 4) Lecture favorites
  16. Repeated Interaction: Strategy in the “Shadow of the Future” (3 of 4) Lecture favorites
  17. Repeated Interaction: Strategy in the “Shadow of the Future” (4 of 4) Lecture favorites
  18. Voting: What is the “Will of the People”? (1 of 2) Lecture favorites
  19. Voting: What is the “Will of the People”? (2 of 2) Lecture favorites
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