Abstract

Abstract Conflict often takes place between groups, and examples of this have been discussed in section 5.5 on inter-group contests for public goods. Such conflict ends once the inter-group contest has determined a winner if the prize that is awarded to the winning group is a good that all group members can consume or if the allocation of the good within the group cannot be influenced by group members. In many cases, the inter-group contest is about private goods, and the conflict does not necessarily end once the contest prize is allocated to one of the groups, or once its shares are allocated to the different groups.

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