We locate tipping points between the fraction of immigrants and the rise of RW populism, and we model our empirical findings using a complex network framework in which the success of globalization rests on a balance between immigration and immigrant integration.
Costly punishment proved to be surprisingly ineffective in promoting cooperation. This ineffectiveness suggests that the rational response to punishment assumed in theoretical studies is overly stylized and needs reexamining.
Scientists strive to understand how functionalities, such as conservation laws, emerge in complex systems. We propose a network mechanism that demonstrates how collective statistical laws can emerge at a macro-level, even when they do not exist at micro-level.
We locate tipping points between the fraction of immigrants and the rise of RW populism, and we model our empirical findings using a complex network framework in which the success of globalization rests on a balance between immigration and immigrant integration.
Costly punishment proved to be surprisingly ineffective in promoting cooperation. This ineffectiveness suggests that the rational response to punishment assumed in theoretical studies is overly stylized and needs reexamining.
Scientists strive to understand how functionalities, such as conservation laws, emerge in complex systems. We propose a network mechanism that demonstrates how collective statistical laws can emerge at a macro-level, even when they do not exist at micro-level.