{"title":"身份与忠诚市场理论:伊拉克叛乱中信息自由流动的案例","authors":"P. Callister","doi":"10.31228/osf.io/5gqf2","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"When monopoly control over the flow of information is lost, the unavoidable consequence is destabilization. Information flow through a society can be understood as a market - not a market exchanging cash for goods, but loyalty for identity. Hence the market is called the Market for Loyalties - so labeled by an economics of information theory first developed by Prof. Monroe Price, of Cardozo Law School, and Director of the Howard M. Squadron Program in Law, Media and Society, to explain government regulation of radio, TV, cable and satellite broadcasting. In post-invasion Iraq, Saddam Hussein lost or monopoly control over the information market, where loyalty and identity were exchanged. The consequence was the plummeting of loyalty that the former regime could command in exchange for its marketed form of identity. The result of the sudden opening of the market is chaotic and violent. New suppliers of identity hawk wares so potent, that the consumer's loyalty extends to martyrdom in the form of suicide bombing (all for a few moments of temporal fame, and bright prospects of rewards in eternity). The current market for loyalties in Iraq is complicated by an additional characteristic - the impact of tribal structures to limit the number of effective buyers in the marketplace. Tribes function as brokers, restricting, the presence of competing buyers and functioning as resellers of identity in the marketplace. The dilemma for the United States is what to do about the new information market in Iraq - to clamp down and re-exert monopoly control, to stand back, laissez-faire-like, and let the market take its natural course, or to somehow manage the slide to equilibrium by carefully eliminating barriers and engineering the emergence of competitors in the market. This article will first present the theoretical underpinning of the market for loyalties in terms of neoclassical economics, emphasizing the importance of identity in this market. In so doing it will apply the theory to understanding many of the instabilities in Iraq and the Middle East. Second, the article suggests implications of the market for loyalties for U.S. policy. The article concludes that despite consideration of tribal intermediation of the information market, which must and can be addressed, US policy is not to win Iraqi loyalty by promulgating its own particular message of identity, but the creation and maintenance of an open and pluralistic market for loyalties within Iraq's information environment. In such a market, diverse identities are sufficiently numerous to insulate the market from potential disruption caused by provocative messages hawked by radical and violent groups. In essence, this Article presents an argument for freedom of speech and information flow based upon market for loyalties theory.","PeriodicalId":43092,"journal":{"name":"Public Law Review","volume":"25 1","pages":"7"},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2005-11-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Identity and Market for Loyalties Theories: The Case for Free Information Flow in Insurgent Iraq\",\"authors\":\"P. Callister\",\"doi\":\"10.31228/osf.io/5gqf2\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"When monopoly control over the flow of information is lost, the unavoidable consequence is destabilization. Information flow through a society can be understood as a market - not a market exchanging cash for goods, but loyalty for identity. Hence the market is called the Market for Loyalties - so labeled by an economics of information theory first developed by Prof. Monroe Price, of Cardozo Law School, and Director of the Howard M. Squadron Program in Law, Media and Society, to explain government regulation of radio, TV, cable and satellite broadcasting. In post-invasion Iraq, Saddam Hussein lost or monopoly control over the information market, where loyalty and identity were exchanged. The consequence was the plummeting of loyalty that the former regime could command in exchange for its marketed form of identity. The result of the sudden opening of the market is chaotic and violent. New suppliers of identity hawk wares so potent, that the consumer's loyalty extends to martyrdom in the form of suicide bombing (all for a few moments of temporal fame, and bright prospects of rewards in eternity). The current market for loyalties in Iraq is complicated by an additional characteristic - the impact of tribal structures to limit the number of effective buyers in the marketplace. Tribes function as brokers, restricting, the presence of competing buyers and functioning as resellers of identity in the marketplace. The dilemma for the United States is what to do about the new information market in Iraq - to clamp down and re-exert monopoly control, to stand back, laissez-faire-like, and let the market take its natural course, or to somehow manage the slide to equilibrium by carefully eliminating barriers and engineering the emergence of competitors in the market. This article will first present the theoretical underpinning of the market for loyalties in terms of neoclassical economics, emphasizing the importance of identity in this market. In so doing it will apply the theory to understanding many of the instabilities in Iraq and the Middle East. Second, the article suggests implications of the market for loyalties for U.S. policy. The article concludes that despite consideration of tribal intermediation of the information market, which must and can be addressed, US policy is not to win Iraqi loyalty by promulgating its own particular message of identity, but the creation and maintenance of an open and pluralistic market for loyalties within Iraq's information environment. In such a market, diverse identities are sufficiently numerous to insulate the market from potential disruption caused by provocative messages hawked by radical and violent groups. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
当对信息流的垄断控制丧失时,不可避免的后果是不稳定。信息在社会中的流动可以被理解为一个市场——不是一个用现金交换商品的市场,而是一个用忠诚交换身份的市场。因此,这个市场被称为“忠诚市场”——这是由卡多佐法学院的门罗·普莱斯教授(Howard M. Squadron法律、媒体与社会项目主任)首先提出的信息经济学理论所赋予的标签,该理论旨在解释政府对广播、电视、有线电视和卫星广播的监管。在入侵伊拉克后,萨达姆•侯赛因(Saddam Hussein)失去了或垄断了对信息市场的控制,在这个市场上,忠诚和身份是相互交换的。其结果是,前政权以其市场形式的身份换取的忠诚度直线下降。市场突然开放的结果是混乱和暴力。新的身份供应商兜售的商品如此强大,以至于消费者的忠诚延伸到以自杀式爆炸的形式殉道(所有这些都是为了短暂的名声,以及永恒回报的光明前景)。伊拉克目前的忠诚市场由于另一个特点而变得复杂——部落结构的影响限制了市场上有效买家的数量。部落就像经纪人一样,限制竞争买家的存在,并在市场中充当身份的转售者。美国面临的两难境地是如何对待伊拉克的新信息市场——是压制并重新施加垄断控制,还是袖手旁观,放任自由,让市场顺其自然,还是通过小心翼翼地消除障碍,设计市场竞争者的出现,以某种方式管理滑向平衡。本文将首先从新古典经济学的角度阐述忠诚市场的理论基础,强调身份在这个市场中的重要性。这样一来,它将把这一理论应用于理解伊拉克和中东的许多不稳定因素。其次,文章提出了市场对美国政策忠诚度的影响。这篇文章的结论是,尽管考虑到资讯市场的部落中介,但美国的政策不是透过宣扬自己独特的身分讯息来赢得伊拉克人的忠诚,而是在伊拉克资讯环境中创造并维持一个开放多元的忠诚市场。在这样一个市场中,多元化的身份足以使市场免受激进和暴力团体兜售的挑衅性信息所造成的潜在破坏。从本质上讲,本文提出了一种基于忠诚市场理论的言论自由和信息自由的论证。
Identity and Market for Loyalties Theories: The Case for Free Information Flow in Insurgent Iraq
When monopoly control over the flow of information is lost, the unavoidable consequence is destabilization. Information flow through a society can be understood as a market - not a market exchanging cash for goods, but loyalty for identity. Hence the market is called the Market for Loyalties - so labeled by an economics of information theory first developed by Prof. Monroe Price, of Cardozo Law School, and Director of the Howard M. Squadron Program in Law, Media and Society, to explain government regulation of radio, TV, cable and satellite broadcasting. In post-invasion Iraq, Saddam Hussein lost or monopoly control over the information market, where loyalty and identity were exchanged. The consequence was the plummeting of loyalty that the former regime could command in exchange for its marketed form of identity. The result of the sudden opening of the market is chaotic and violent. New suppliers of identity hawk wares so potent, that the consumer's loyalty extends to martyrdom in the form of suicide bombing (all for a few moments of temporal fame, and bright prospects of rewards in eternity). The current market for loyalties in Iraq is complicated by an additional characteristic - the impact of tribal structures to limit the number of effective buyers in the marketplace. Tribes function as brokers, restricting, the presence of competing buyers and functioning as resellers of identity in the marketplace. The dilemma for the United States is what to do about the new information market in Iraq - to clamp down and re-exert monopoly control, to stand back, laissez-faire-like, and let the market take its natural course, or to somehow manage the slide to equilibrium by carefully eliminating barriers and engineering the emergence of competitors in the market. This article will first present the theoretical underpinning of the market for loyalties in terms of neoclassical economics, emphasizing the importance of identity in this market. In so doing it will apply the theory to understanding many of the instabilities in Iraq and the Middle East. Second, the article suggests implications of the market for loyalties for U.S. policy. The article concludes that despite consideration of tribal intermediation of the information market, which must and can be addressed, US policy is not to win Iraqi loyalty by promulgating its own particular message of identity, but the creation and maintenance of an open and pluralistic market for loyalties within Iraq's information environment. In such a market, diverse identities are sufficiently numerous to insulate the market from potential disruption caused by provocative messages hawked by radical and violent groups. In essence, this Article presents an argument for freedom of speech and information flow based upon market for loyalties theory.