creators_name: Situngkir, Hokky creators_name: Khanafiah, Deni creators_name: Sartika, Tiktik type: techreport datestamp: 2004-08-25 lastmod: 2011-03-11 08:55:40 metadata_visibility: show title: EVOLUTIONARY STABLE PROPERTIES OF POLITICAL PARTIES IN INDONESIA ispublished: pub subjects: soc-psy subjects: behav-anal full_text_status: public keywords: memetics, political party, evolutionary stable, general election abstract: The major idea is to use memetics as an analytical tool on viewing how the existing political parties towards General Election 2004 creating formation of their presidential candidacy, ideology behind it, the change of political atmosphere it will bring, etc. into a compact evolutionary model that exhibits fitness of each political party within population of a society. The strategy used is through transforming polling statistical language into evolutionary stable language of dynamical system. Here, memetic method is applied as an evolutionary computational tool. date: 2004-03 date_type: published institution: Bandung Fe Institute department: Dept. Computational Sociology refereed: TRUE referencetext: Achen, Christopher H. (1992). “Social Psychology, Demographic Variables, and Linear Regression: Breaking the Iron Triangle in Voting Research”. Political Behavior 14(3):195-211. Kluwer Academic Publishers. Axelrod, R. (1997). “The Dissemination of Culture: A Model with Local Convergence and Global Polarization”. The Journal of Conflict Resolution 41(2):203-26. Sage Publications. Beer, Stafford. (1972, 1995). Brain of the Firm 2nd Edition. John Wiley & Sons. Brodie, R. (1996). Viruses of the Mind: The New Science of the Meme. Integral Press. Chaitin, Gregory J. (1991). “Algorithmic Information & Evolution”. Dalam Solbirg, O. T. (1991). Perspectives on Biological Complexity. Pp.51-60. IUBS Press. Dawkins R. (1976, 1982). The selfish gene. Oxford University Press. de Jong, Martin. (1999). “Survival of the Institutionally Fittest Concepts”. Journal of Memetics - Evolutionary Models of Information Transmission, 4. URL: http://jomemit.cfpm.org/1999/vol3/de_jong_m.html Epstein, J.M., dan Axtell, R. (1996). Growing Artificial Societies: Social Science from the Bottom Up. The Brookings Institution Press dan MIT Press. Evans, Raymond. (2003). Sejarah Pemilu & Partai Politik di Indonesia. PT. Siem & Co. Frank, Steven A. (1957, 1998). Foundations of Social Evolution. Princeton University Press. Gen, Mitsuo & Cheng, Runwei. Genetic Algorithms & Engineering Design. Wiley Publication. Heylighen F. (1993): "Selection Criteria for the Evolution of Knowledge", Proceeding 13th International Congress on Cybernetics. International Association of Cybernetics. p.524-528 Johnson, Richard. (1992). “Party Identification and Campaign Dynamics”, Political Behavior 14(3): 311-331. Kluwer Academic Publishers. Khanafiah, Deni & Situngkir, Hokky. (2003). Metabolism of Social System: N-Person Iterated Prisoner Dilemma Analysis in Random Boolean Network. Working Paper WPV2003. Bandung Fe Institute. Lodge, Milton., Stroh, Patrick., & Wahlke, John. (1990). “Black-Box Model of Candidate Evaluation”. Political Behavior 12(1):5-18. Kluwer Academic Publishers. Saari, Donald, G. (1994). Geometry of Voting. Springer-Verlag. Sartika, Tiktik Dewi. (2004). Tracing Cultural Evolution through Memetics. Working Paper WPF2004. Bandung Fe Institute. Situngkir, Hokky & Hariadi, Yun. (2003). Dinamika Evolusioner Kontrak Sosial di Indonesia. Working Paper WPK2003. Bandung Fe Institute. Situngkir, Hokky (2003). “Powers of the Governmental State as Feedback Control System”. Journal of Social Complexity 1(1): 7-17. Bandung Fe Institute. Situngkir, Hokky. (2004). On Selfish Memes: Culture as Complex Adaptive System. Working Paper WPG2004. Bandung Fe Institute. citation: Situngkir, Mr Hokky and Khanafiah, Mr Deni and Sartika, Mr Tiktik (2004) EVOLUTIONARY STABLE PROPERTIES OF POLITICAL PARTIES IN INDONESIA. [Departmental Technical Report] document_url: http://cogprints.org/3771/1/2004h.pdf