International organizations use a bewildering variety of voting rules-with different thresholds, weighting systems, veto points, and other rules that distribute influence unequally among participants. We provide a brief survey of the major voting systems, and show that all are controversial and unsatisfactory in various ways. While it is tempting to blame great powers or the weakness of international law for these problems, we argue that the root source is intellectual rather than political--the difficulty of designing a voting system that both allows efficient collective decisions and protects the legitimate interests of members. We show how a new type of voting system--quadratic voting--could in theory resolve these problems, and while it...
International audienceWe raise questions about voting rules, and provide some of the answers. The me...
This Article contends that the current system of weighted voting is essential for the efficient oper...
In his well known 1971 paper the mathematical sociologist James S. Coleman, proposed three measures ...
International organizations use a bewildering variety of voting rules—with different thresholds, wei...
Some international organizations are governed by unanimity rule, others by (simple or qualified) maj...
The author is grateful to Adrienne Héritier and Julia Sievers for their detailed comments on earlier...
This article analyses the origins and consequences of multicameral representation and voting in inte...
International organizations use a variety of voting procedures. Some of these procedures are based o...
International organizations use a variety of voting procedures. Some of these procedures are based o...
I study a self-enforcing mechanism for an international organization that interacts repeatedly over ...
International audienceWe study the design of voting rules for committees representing heterogeneous ...
Various observers have proposed weighted voting as part of an overhaul of the UN Security Council. T...
Abstract: Although many international organisations are formally built on the principle of „one coun...
Some international organizations are governed by unanimity rule, some others by a majority system. S...
In general in an organisation whose system of governance involves weighted voting, a member's weight...
International audienceWe raise questions about voting rules, and provide some of the answers. The me...
This Article contends that the current system of weighted voting is essential for the efficient oper...
In his well known 1971 paper the mathematical sociologist James S. Coleman, proposed three measures ...
International organizations use a bewildering variety of voting rules—with different thresholds, wei...
Some international organizations are governed by unanimity rule, others by (simple or qualified) maj...
The author is grateful to Adrienne Héritier and Julia Sievers for their detailed comments on earlier...
This article analyses the origins and consequences of multicameral representation and voting in inte...
International organizations use a variety of voting procedures. Some of these procedures are based o...
International organizations use a variety of voting procedures. Some of these procedures are based o...
I study a self-enforcing mechanism for an international organization that interacts repeatedly over ...
International audienceWe study the design of voting rules for committees representing heterogeneous ...
Various observers have proposed weighted voting as part of an overhaul of the UN Security Council. T...
Abstract: Although many international organisations are formally built on the principle of „one coun...
Some international organizations are governed by unanimity rule, some others by a majority system. S...
In general in an organisation whose system of governance involves weighted voting, a member's weight...
International audienceWe raise questions about voting rules, and provide some of the answers. The me...
This Article contends that the current system of weighted voting is essential for the efficient oper...
In his well known 1971 paper the mathematical sociologist James S. Coleman, proposed three measures ...