Published August 1993 | Submitted
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Constitutional Secession Clauses

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Abstract

Taking the view that constitutions are devices whereby people coordinate to specific equilibria in circumstances that allow multiple equilibria, we show that a constitutional secession clause can serve as such a device and, therefore, that such a clause is more than an empty promise or an ineffectual threat. Employing a simple three-person recursive game, we establish that under certain conditions, this game possesses two equilibria - one in which a disadvantaged federal unit secedes and is not punished by the other units in the federation, and a second equilibrium in which this unit does not secede but is punished if it chooses to do so.

Additional Information

This research was partially funded by a grant from the United States Institute of Peace to the California Institute of Technology. Published as Chen, Yan, and Peter C. Ordeshook. "Constitutional secession clauses." Constitutional Political Economy 5, no. 1 (1994): 45-60.

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