Title

Nature Of The Selenium Submonolayer Effect On The Oxygen Electroreduction Reaction Activity Of Ru(0001)

Keywords

CALFED; California; Chicken; Conflict resolution; Delta; Game theory; Prisoner's dilemma

Abstract

California's Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta is the major hub of California's water supply system and is central to the ecosystem of many native threatened and endangered species. Conflicts over the Delta have evolved over more than a century. This paper traces changes in this conflict in game-theoretic terms, with its implications for the region's physical and ecological decline and governance. The Delta is not a zero-sum problem and win-win resolutions may exist if stakeholders cooperate. Game theory provides some insights on the potential for win-win solutions. The Delta problem has had a Prisoner's Dilemma structure, in which stakeholder self-interest makes cooperation unlikely within a reasonable time frame. However, the core of the Delta conflict is changing as the unsustainable future becomes more widely understood. Today's Delta problem has characteristics of a Chicken game, where cooperation is in everyone's interest, but it is unlikely because parties deviating from the status quo are likely to bear more of the costs of a long-term solution. The State of California may become the victim (or chicken) of the Delta game, bearing the greatest costs, if it continues to rely on leaving parties to develop voluntary cooperative solutions without a sufficient mechanism for enforcing cooperation. © 2012 American Society of Civil Engineers.

Publication Date

3-29-2012

Publication Title

Journal of Physical Chemistry C

Volume

116

Issue

2

Number of Pages

7173-7179

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1021/jp2072952

Socpus ID

84859369432 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/84859369432

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