Description
The term "contagion" and the theory of networks is nowadays employed to study increasingly diverse issues such as financial crises, epidemics, and fake news. It provides a unifying framework to describe various social and economic phenomena that occur within different networks - involving various forms of contagion.
This book discusses contagion over social and economic networks, and its consequences for modern societies. It starts with an accessible but solid introduction to basic concepts of the theory of networks, with intuitive explanations and examples both of networks that shape our daily lives, and of how researchers analyze them. It then focuses specifically on contagion, and on its importance for societies. Three crucial examples are analyzed more in depth: epidemiological contagion, fake news and financial crises. The conclusions show how various societal problems - each consequence of some form of contagion - call for similar policy measures: a pre-emptive and comprehensive effort in collecting the required information, and a shift in the concept of individual responsibility itself.
This is a book for any reader looking interested in how contagions and networks shape modern society.
About the Author
Pietro Battiston is an Assistant Professor in Economics at University of Pisa, Italy. After a degree in Mathematics, he obtained an MSc in Economics from University of Bologna and a PhD in Economics from University of Milan Bicocca. His main research interests are Network Theory, Experimental Economics, Tax Compliance and Bibliometrics. He has published on prestigious international journals including Scandinavian Journal of Economics, Health Policy, World Development, Games and Economic Behavior. He is active in the popularization of economics via articles on general media, talks in festivals, online videos. His website is https://pietrobattiston.it.
Book Information
ISBN 9781032791975
Author Pietro Battiston
Format Hardback
Page Count 288
Imprint Routledge
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd