William Spaniel: International Relations 101 International Relations 101 (#58): What Is a Public Good?
International Relations 101 (#58): What Is a Public Good? Transcript and Lesson Notes
http://gametheory101.com/courses/international-relations-101/ A public good is non-rival and non-excludable, meaning an individual's consumption of the good does not affect others' consumption and it is impossible to exc
Quick Summary
http://gametheory101.com/courses/international-relations-101/ A public good is non-rival and non-excludable, meaning an individual's consumption of the good does not affect others' consumption and it is impossible to exc
Key Takeaways
- Review the core idea: http://gametheory101.com/courses/international-relations-101/ A public good is non-rival and non-excludable, meaning an individual's consumption of the good does not affect others' consumption and it is impossible to exc
- Understand how international relations fits into International Relations 101 (#58): What Is a Public Good?.
- Understand how political science fits into International Relations 101 (#58): What Is a Public Good?.
- Understand how rival fits into International Relations 101 (#58): What Is a Public Good?.
- Understand how excludable fits into International Relations 101 (#58): What Is a Public Good?.
Key Concepts
Full Transcript
http://gametheory101.com/courses/international-relations-101/ A public good is non-rival and non-excludable, meaning an individual's consumption of the good does not affect others' consumption and it is impossible to exclude individuals from consuming it. Non-excludable goods can be problematic in international affairs. This unit looks at how states mitigate the problem.
Lesson FAQs
What is International Relations 101 (#58): What Is a Public Good? about?
http://gametheory101.com/courses/international-relations-101/ A public good is non-rival and non-excludable, meaning an individual's consumption of the good does not affect others' consumption and it is impossible to exc
What key concepts are covered in this lesson?
The lesson covers international relations, political science, rival, excludable, public goods.
What should I learn before International Relations 101 (#58): What Is a Public Good??
Review the previous lessons in William Spaniel: International Relations 101, then use the transcript and key concepts on this page to fill any gaps.
How can I practice after this lesson?
Practice by applying the main concepts: international relations, political science, rival, excludable.
Does this lesson include a transcript?
Yes. The full transcript is visible on this page in indexable HTML sections.
Is this lesson free?
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