Christopher K. Frantz is Associate Professor of Computational Social Science at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Norway. His work focuses on computational approaches to institutional analysis, with specific focus on agent-based modelling techniques. A particular interest lies in analyzing socio-institutional phenomena in artificial societies, including their emergence and lifecycle dynamics, as well as establishing explanatory linkages to the underlying behavioral processes. A conceptual refinement of his work was the systematic introduction of nesting principles into the Institutional Grammar aimed at improving the Grammar's conceptual validity to represent institutions of arbitrary type and complexity.
Saba Siddiki is Associate Professor of Public Administration and International Affairs at Syracuse University, USA. Her research focuses on institutional design, particularly, policy design. She studies the structure/content of policy design as well as the behavioral and policy implications of policy design. In connection with research foci, she has been involved in the theoretical and methodological advancement of the Institutional Grammar. She has specifically focused on empirically validating how the Institutional Grammar can be used to operationalize various policy relevant theoretical constructs and expanding the syntactic structure upon which the Institutional Grammar is based.Chapter 1. Introduction. - Chapter 2. Review of Institutional Grammar Research: Overview, Opportunities, Challenges. - Chapter 3. Motivation for a New Institutional Grammar. - Chapter 4. Institutional Grammar 2.0: Conceptual Foundations and General Syntax. - Chapter 5. Institutional Grammar 2.0: Deep Structural Parsing and Hybrid Institutional Statements. - Chapter 6. Institutional Grammar 2.0: Semantic Features and Analytical Linkages. - Chapter 7. Methodological Guidance for Encoding Institutional Information. - Chapter 8. Institutional Analysis and Applications. - Chapter 9. Contextualization and Future Development of the Institutional Grammar