Ordered Anarchy, State and Rent-Seeking: The Icelandic Commonwealth 930-1264

My task is to come up with a theory of cooperation and, then, apply that theory to a particular historical case. The historical case I discuss Is the rise and decline of social order in medieval Iceland; the so-called Commonwealth period. The Commonwealth experience poses two main questions; first,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Runólfsson, Birgir Þór
Other Authors: George Mason University
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: George Mason University 1991
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/456
id ftopinvisindi:oai:opinvisindi.is:20.500.11815/456
record_format openpolar
spelling ftopinvisindi:oai:opinvisindi.is:20.500.11815/456 2024-09-15T18:14:30+00:00 Ordered Anarchy, State and Rent-Seeking: The Icelandic Commonwealth 930-1264 Runólfsson, Birgir Þór George Mason University 1991 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/456 en eng George Mason University Birgir Þór Runólfsson. (1991). Ordered Anarchy, State and Rent-Seeking: The Icelandic Commonwealth 930-1264 (doktorsritgerð). George Mason University, Fairfax. https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/456 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Hagsaga Þjóðveldisöld Doktorsritgerðir info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis 1991 ftopinvisindi https://doi.org/20.500.11815/456 2024-07-09T03:01:56Z My task is to come up with a theory of cooperation and, then, apply that theory to a particular historical case. The historical case I discuss Is the rise and decline of social order in medieval Iceland; the so-called Commonwealth period. The Commonwealth experience poses two main questions; first, how did the Commonwealth emerge, and, second, why did it break down. I begin by discussing the concepts of reciprocity and cooperation, and then offer an evolutionary theory of cooperation. Next, I put the theory to the test of actually explaining the rise of the Commonwealth’s institutional structure. I find that the theory is highly informative in application and able to account for Iceland’s institutional structure. Reciprocal behavior on the part of the Icelander’s initiated and created the cooperative institutional system. The keys to the stability of the system are found in the encouragement of reciprocical behavior, where the future repeated engagements are important enough to discourage defections. The Commonwealth was a decentralized structure, based mostly on voluntary cooperation, and enforcements of judgements were private. Along with expanding population, the Commonwealth chieftains position as arbitrators and owners of churches strengthened their position with respect to their followers. As time went by they realized the advantage of their privileged status and combined the sale of legal and religious services for their own benefit. By the last decade of the eleventh century the chieftains were able to use their position to introduce the tithe, obligating farmers to pay a tax to the chieftains and the Church, of one percentile of their wealth. In essence, rent-seeking (defection) became more profitable for the chieftains than long-term reciprocial behavior. Reciprocity , fruitful in establishing Iceland’s institutional structure, lost its importance and such behavior diminished. The tied sales of legal and religious services established the chieftains as local monopolies, as minimal states. These minimal ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Iceland Opin vísindi (Iceland)
institution Open Polar
collection Opin vísindi (Iceland)
op_collection_id ftopinvisindi
language English
topic Hagsaga
Þjóðveldisöld
Doktorsritgerðir
spellingShingle Hagsaga
Þjóðveldisöld
Doktorsritgerðir
Runólfsson, Birgir Þór
Ordered Anarchy, State and Rent-Seeking: The Icelandic Commonwealth 930-1264
topic_facet Hagsaga
Þjóðveldisöld
Doktorsritgerðir
description My task is to come up with a theory of cooperation and, then, apply that theory to a particular historical case. The historical case I discuss Is the rise and decline of social order in medieval Iceland; the so-called Commonwealth period. The Commonwealth experience poses two main questions; first, how did the Commonwealth emerge, and, second, why did it break down. I begin by discussing the concepts of reciprocity and cooperation, and then offer an evolutionary theory of cooperation. Next, I put the theory to the test of actually explaining the rise of the Commonwealth’s institutional structure. I find that the theory is highly informative in application and able to account for Iceland’s institutional structure. Reciprocal behavior on the part of the Icelander’s initiated and created the cooperative institutional system. The keys to the stability of the system are found in the encouragement of reciprocical behavior, where the future repeated engagements are important enough to discourage defections. The Commonwealth was a decentralized structure, based mostly on voluntary cooperation, and enforcements of judgements were private. Along with expanding population, the Commonwealth chieftains position as arbitrators and owners of churches strengthened their position with respect to their followers. As time went by they realized the advantage of their privileged status and combined the sale of legal and religious services for their own benefit. By the last decade of the eleventh century the chieftains were able to use their position to introduce the tithe, obligating farmers to pay a tax to the chieftains and the Church, of one percentile of their wealth. In essence, rent-seeking (defection) became more profitable for the chieftains than long-term reciprocial behavior. Reciprocity , fruitful in establishing Iceland’s institutional structure, lost its importance and such behavior diminished. The tied sales of legal and religious services established the chieftains as local monopolies, as minimal states. These minimal ...
author2 George Mason University
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Runólfsson, Birgir Þór
author_facet Runólfsson, Birgir Þór
author_sort Runólfsson, Birgir Þór
title Ordered Anarchy, State and Rent-Seeking: The Icelandic Commonwealth 930-1264
title_short Ordered Anarchy, State and Rent-Seeking: The Icelandic Commonwealth 930-1264
title_full Ordered Anarchy, State and Rent-Seeking: The Icelandic Commonwealth 930-1264
title_fullStr Ordered Anarchy, State and Rent-Seeking: The Icelandic Commonwealth 930-1264
title_full_unstemmed Ordered Anarchy, State and Rent-Seeking: The Icelandic Commonwealth 930-1264
title_sort ordered anarchy, state and rent-seeking: the icelandic commonwealth 930-1264
publisher George Mason University
publishDate 1991
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/456
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation Birgir Þór Runólfsson. (1991). Ordered Anarchy, State and Rent-Seeking: The Icelandic Commonwealth 930-1264 (doktorsritgerð). George Mason University, Fairfax.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/456
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.11815/456
_version_ 1810452263217397760