Original draft submitted to SSRN in September 2002Political parties in Northern Ireland recently used a divisor method of apportionment to choose, in sequence, ten cabinet ministries. If the parties have complete information about each other’s preferences, we show that it may not be rational for them to act sincerely by choosing their most-preferred ministry that is available. One consequence of acting sophisticatedly is that the resulting allocation may not be Pareto-optimal, making all the parties worse off. Another is non-monotonicity – choosing earlier may hurt rather than help a party. We introduce a mechanism, combining sequential choices with a structured form of trading, that results in sincere choices for two parties that avoids th...
2 We analyze a sequential algorithm (SA) for allocating indivisible items that are strictly ranked b...
We characterize optimal appointments to a committee whose members play a coalition proof equilibrium...
When it comes to voting in parliament, party group unity is the rule rather than the exception in mo...
Political parties in Northern Ireland recently used a divisor method of apportionment to choose, in ...
Political parties in Northern Ireland recently used a divisor method of apportionment to choose, in ...
Political parties in Northern Ireland recently used a divisor method of apportionment to choose, in ...
Brams SJ, Kaplan TR. Dividing the indivisible: procedures for allocation cabinet ministries to polit...
Political parties bargain over the allocation of cabinet portfolios when form-ing coalition governme...
In the classic apportionment problem the goal is to decide how many seats of a parliament should be ...
Political apportionment is the allocation of an integer number of seats to each of a number of subun...
How do political parties divide coalition payoffs in multiparty governments? Perhaps the most striki...
In this paper we develop a basic model of endogenous choice of electoral rules in a multiparty syste...
How does intra-party competition affect governance in multiparty cabinets? For a long time scholars ...
This article promotes a characterization of intraparty politics that explains how rank- and-filepart...
Basic arithmetic of legislative decisions / 1 Despite the huge number of possible seat distributions...
2 We analyze a sequential algorithm (SA) for allocating indivisible items that are strictly ranked b...
We characterize optimal appointments to a committee whose members play a coalition proof equilibrium...
When it comes to voting in parliament, party group unity is the rule rather than the exception in mo...
Political parties in Northern Ireland recently used a divisor method of apportionment to choose, in ...
Political parties in Northern Ireland recently used a divisor method of apportionment to choose, in ...
Political parties in Northern Ireland recently used a divisor method of apportionment to choose, in ...
Brams SJ, Kaplan TR. Dividing the indivisible: procedures for allocation cabinet ministries to polit...
Political parties bargain over the allocation of cabinet portfolios when form-ing coalition governme...
In the classic apportionment problem the goal is to decide how many seats of a parliament should be ...
Political apportionment is the allocation of an integer number of seats to each of a number of subun...
How do political parties divide coalition payoffs in multiparty governments? Perhaps the most striki...
In this paper we develop a basic model of endogenous choice of electoral rules in a multiparty syste...
How does intra-party competition affect governance in multiparty cabinets? For a long time scholars ...
This article promotes a characterization of intraparty politics that explains how rank- and-filepart...
Basic arithmetic of legislative decisions / 1 Despite the huge number of possible seat distributions...
2 We analyze a sequential algorithm (SA) for allocating indivisible items that are strictly ranked b...
We characterize optimal appointments to a committee whose members play a coalition proof equilibrium...
When it comes to voting in parliament, party group unity is the rule rather than the exception in mo...