Abstract

This article examines what theoretical contributions game theory has made on comparative politics of non-Western states. Political scientists have been drawn to these regions to revisit such classic issues of political science as state building, dictatorship, democratization, revolution. These issues was studied in terms of culturalist and structuralist approaches. Yet, recently game theoretical approaches based on methodological individualism have uncovered micro-foundations of such macro events. The success of this recent comparative studies leads us to expect that game theory based comparative politics of non-Western regions continue to produce fruitful theoretical outcomes.

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