Showing 1 through 3 of 3 records. | 1. Kim, G.. "Political Conflicts in the Shadow of Violence: A Preface to a Theory on the Nature and the Timing of Political Stabilizations in Crisis Situations" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Marriott, Loews Philadelphia, and the Pennsylvania Convention Center, Philadelphia, PA, <Not Available>. 2009-12-04 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p153299_index.html>Publication Type: Proceeding |
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| | Pages: 1 pages | || | Words: 203 words | || | |
| 2. Kim, G.. "Political Wars of Attrition: A Preface to a Unifying Theory of Political Transitions, Revolutions, and Civil Wars" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Marriott Wardman Park, Omni Shoreham, Washington Hilton, Washington, DC, Sep 01, 2005 <Not Available>. 2009-12-04 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p42430_index.html>Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Review Method: Peer Reviewed Abstract: In this paper, the following theoretical conjecture is proved to be true. In the case of incomplete information, continuous type, continuous time and infinite horizon war of attrition with two outside options, there exists a symmetric equilibirum where types that are below the cutoff point make concession and where types that are above the cutoff point uses violence. The time of concession is strictly increasing and the time of attack is strictly decreasing with respect to type. The cutoff point is the ratio of the cost of using violence and the size of prize.
Please contact the author at kimjyz@umich.edu for a copy of the paper. |
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| | Pages: 42 pages | || | Words: 13417 words | || | |
| 3. Maynard, Douglas. "Defensiveness in Interaction: The Use of I-Mean Prefaced Utterances in Complaint and Other Conversational Sequences" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, TBA, New York, New York City, Aug 11, 2007 Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2009-12-04 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p185003_index.html>Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Abstract: Conversational I-Mean Prefaced Utterances (IMPUs for short) as self-repair at transition spaces overwhelmingly occur in the context of complaint-type sequences. Furthermore, when they appear in relation to complaints, these IMPUs embellish those complaints and are defensive in manner. The overall purpose of this paper is to examine the interactional circumstances of this defensiveness, or to answer the question of what kind of work IMPUs do in relation to complaints. The data suggest that these second-position IMPUs are handling the character of complaints as dispreferred social actions. And these IMPUs encourage acknowledgement, confirmation, agreement, and other aligning types of responses to complaints. Although IMPUs appear overwhelming in the context of complaint sequences, they can manage other types of sequences as well. In the end we will see that the other sequences within with IMPUs appear are of the same order as complaint sequences. That is, IMPUs can work to defuse inapposite initiating actions, actions that although not complaints themselves, may be complainable in their own right. |
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