A core allocation of a complete information economy can be characterized as one
that would not be unanimously rejected in favor of another feasible alternative
by any coalition. We use this test of coalitional voting in an incomplete information
environment to formalize a notion of resilience. Since information transmission
is implicit in the Bayesian equilibria of such voting games, this approach makes
it possible to derive core concepts in which the transmission of information among
members of a coalition is endogenous. Our results lend support to the credible
core of Dutta and Vohra (2003) and the core proposed by Myerson (2003) as two
that can be justified in terms of coalitional voting.