From Handwiki In category theory and homotopy theory the Burnside category of a finite group G is a category whose objects are finite G-sets and whose morphisms are (equivalence classes of) spans of G-equivariant maps. It is a categorification of the Burnside ring of G.
Let G be a finite group (in fact everything will work verbatim for a profinite group). Then for any two finite G-sets X and Y we can define an equivalence relation among spans of G-sets of the form [math]\displaystyle{ X\leftarrow U \rightarrow Y }[/math] where two spans [math]\displaystyle{ X\leftarrow U \rightarrow Y }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ X\leftarrow W \rightarrow Y }[/math]are equivalent if and only if there is a G-equivariant bijection of U and W commuting with the projection maps to X and Y. This set of equivalence classes form naturally a monoid under disjoint union; we indicate with [math]\displaystyle{ A(G)(X,Y) }[/math] the group completion of that monoid. Taking pullbacks induces natural maps [math]\displaystyle{ A(G)(X,Y)\times A(G)(Y,Z)\rightarrow A(G)(X,Z) }[/math].
Finally we can define the Burnside category A(G) of G as the category whose objects are finite G-sets and the morphisms spaces are the groups [math]\displaystyle{ A(G)(X,Y) }[/math].
If C is an additive category, then a C-valued Mackey functor is an additive functor from A(G) to C. Mackey functors are important in representation theory and stable equivariant homotopy theory.
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Categories: [Category theory] [Group theory]
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