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Article
Wargaming for Social Science
SSRN eLibrary (2021)
  • Brandon Valeriano, Ph.D, Seton Hall University
  • Benjamin Jensen, Marine Corps University
Abstract
The recent surge of practitioners and academics utilizing wargames as methods of social science research warrants further exploration. This approach recreates interdependent foreign policy decision-making given high risk and uncertainty, offering insights into political and military domains often devoid of data. Wargames provide researchers with a method to gather evidence and observations on events otherwise be unobservable or difficult to measure. Wargames can provide a pathway towards novel methods of experimentation, serving as a method to investigate an alternative reality that has yet to occur in the real world. Yet, these methods do not come without controversy and intense pushback from some in the wargaming community. This paper will review both the utility and downsides of using wargames for social science, situating the issue as a novel method not without criticism. As with all methods of social science analysis, knowledge of the possibilities and limitations is critical to understanding how progress can be made on “wicked problems.”
Keywords
  • cyber security,
  • cyber conflict,
  • wargames,
  • wargames for social science
Publication Date
July 16, 2021
DOI
10.2139/ssrn.3888395
Citation Information
Brandon Valeriano and Benjamin Jensen. "Wargaming for Social Science" SSRN eLibrary (2021)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/brandon-valeriano/45/