This Website has a limited use of cookies. By using this website, you are agreeing to the terms and conditions listed in our data protection policy. Read more

Journal of Mathematical Sociology

Key Player Policies When Contextual Effects Matter

Journal Article
Reference
Ballester, Coralio and Yves Zenou (2014). “Key Player Policies When Contextual Effects Matter”. Journal of Mathematical Sociology 38(4), 233–248. doi.org/10.1080/0022250X.2013.803100

Authors
Coralio Ballester, Yves Zenou

We consider a model where the criminal decision of each individual is affected by not only her own characteristics, but also by the characteristics of her friends (contextual effects). We determine who the key player is, i.e., the criminal who once removed generates the highest reduction in total crime in the network. We propose a new measure, the contextual intercentrality measure, that generalizes the one proposed by Ballester, Calvo´ -Armengol, and Zenou (2006) by taking into account the change in contextual effects following the removal of the key player. We also provide an example showing that the key player can be different whether contextual effects are taken into account or not. This means that the planner may target the wrong person if it ignores the effect of the ‘‘context’’ when removing a criminal from a network.