Can intense preferences be accommodated in voting schemes without shifting power to wealthier citizens and organized interests? This article first situates the question within the larger issue of the inalienability of some legal rights, and then focuses on collective action problems among voters. These problems offer a way to explain our present rules and intuitions regarding vote buying and related matters in areas ranging from corporate law to associations and to campaign finance reform. But in large-scale general elections, collective action problems are likely to doom strategies for extracting information about intense preferences, and they may even produce perverse results. Still, there may be room for careful innovation, aimed at capt...
This work presents a rationale for the prevalent limits to voters' information disclosure in elector...
Any culture that requires that a decision be made within a group necessarily creates methods for agg...
The paper considers approval voting for a large population of voters.It is proven that, based on sta...
Can intense preferences be accommodated in voting schemes without shifting power to wealthier citize...
International audienceIf voters vote strategically, is it useful to offer them the possibility of ex...
This dissertation consists of three related chapters. The first chapter, which is written jointly w...
Conventional democratic institutions aggregate preferences poorly. The norm of one-person-one-vote w...
Democratic societies have been increasingly confronted with extreme, knife-edge election outcomes th...
The first part of this Thesis asks whether we can devise voting rules that allow strategic voters to...
Social choice theory is concerned with developing and evaluating voting systems, both for the use of...
Whether individuals vote strategically is one of the most important questions at the intersection of...
This research begins with a simple question: do direct democratic voting systems fulfill their promi...
Democratic societies base much of their decisions on voting procedures that involve aggregation of i...
After Felsenthal DS, Rapoport A, Maoz Z (1988) experimental research on Duverger’s Law and Strategic...
This dissertation consists of three chapters, which aim at exploring respectively: i) how parties’ a...
This work presents a rationale for the prevalent limits to voters' information disclosure in elector...
Any culture that requires that a decision be made within a group necessarily creates methods for agg...
The paper considers approval voting for a large population of voters.It is proven that, based on sta...
Can intense preferences be accommodated in voting schemes without shifting power to wealthier citize...
International audienceIf voters vote strategically, is it useful to offer them the possibility of ex...
This dissertation consists of three related chapters. The first chapter, which is written jointly w...
Conventional democratic institutions aggregate preferences poorly. The norm of one-person-one-vote w...
Democratic societies have been increasingly confronted with extreme, knife-edge election outcomes th...
The first part of this Thesis asks whether we can devise voting rules that allow strategic voters to...
Social choice theory is concerned with developing and evaluating voting systems, both for the use of...
Whether individuals vote strategically is one of the most important questions at the intersection of...
This research begins with a simple question: do direct democratic voting systems fulfill their promi...
Democratic societies base much of their decisions on voting procedures that involve aggregation of i...
After Felsenthal DS, Rapoport A, Maoz Z (1988) experimental research on Duverger’s Law and Strategic...
This dissertation consists of three chapters, which aim at exploring respectively: i) how parties’ a...
This work presents a rationale for the prevalent limits to voters' information disclosure in elector...
Any culture that requires that a decision be made within a group necessarily creates methods for agg...
The paper considers approval voting for a large population of voters.It is proven that, based on sta...