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Abstract(s)
Problem: In the study of conflicts, both economists and evolutionary biologists use the
concepts ‘tragedy of the commons’ and ‘public goods dilemma’. What is the relationship
between the economist and evolutionist views of these concepts?
Model features: The economics literature defines the tragedy of the commons and the public
goods dilemma in terms of rivalry and excludability of the good. In contrast, evolutionists
define these conflicts based on fitness functions with two components: individual and group
components of fitness.
Mathematical method: Evolutionary game theory and the calculation of evolutionarily stable
strategy trait values by standard optimization techniques and by replacing slopes of group
phenotype on individual genotype by coefficients of relatedness.
Conclusion: There is a direct relationship between rivalry and the individual component of
fitness and between excludability and the group component of fitness. Moreover, although the
prisoner’s dilemma constitutes a suitable metaphor to analyse both the public goods dilemma
and the tragedy of the commons, it gives the false idea that the two conflicts are symmetric since
they refer to situations in which individuals consume a common resource – tragedy of the
commons – or contribute to a collective action or common good – public goods dilemma.
However, the two situations are clearly not symmetric: from the economical point of view they
differ by rivalry, and from the evolutionary biology point of view the two conflicts differ by the
significance of the within-group competition in the fitness function.
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Keywords
collective action excludability prisoner's dilemma public goods dilemma rivalry tragedy of the commons Pathogenic Bacteria Cooperation Kin Selection Model Prisoner’s dilemma Public goods dilemma Tragedy of the commons
Citation
Dionisio, F., Gordo, I. (2006) The Tragedy of the Commons, the Public Goods Dilemma, and the meaning of Rivalry and Excludability in Evolutionary Biology. Evolutionary Ecology Research 8: 321-332