Voting paradoxes have played an important role in the theory of voting. They typically say very little about the circumstances in which they are particularly likely or unlikely to occur. They are basically existence findings. In this article we study some well known voting paradoxes under the assumption that the underlying profiles are drawn from the Condorcet domain, i.e. a set of preference profiles where a Condorcet winner exists. The motivation for this restriction is the often stated assumption that profiles with a Condorcet winner are more likely than those without it. We further restrict the profiles by assuming that the starting point of our analysis is that the Condorcet winner coincides with the choice of the voting rule under scr...
The goal of this paper is to propose a comparison of four multi-winner voting rules, k-Plurality, k-...
We consider voting correspondences that are, besidesCondorcet Consistent, immune against the two str...
We provide intuitive, formal, and computational evidence that in a large society Condorcet's paradox...
We report in this note some results on the theoretical likelihood of Condorcet's Other Paradox in th...
Condorcet’s paradox occurs when there is no alternative that beats every other alternative by majori...
We consider two no-show paradoxes, in which a voter obtains a preferable outcome by abstaining from ...
Consider a group of individuals who have to collectively choose an outcome from a finite set of feas...
The No Show Paradox (there is a voter who would rather not vote) is known to affect every Condorcet ...
This book argues that strange election outcomes should become less likely as voters' preferences bec...
In this note, we formulate a condition describing the vulnerability of a social choice function to a...
More and more results from social choice theory are used to argue about collective decision making i...
The No Show Paradox (there is a voter who would rather not vote) is known to affect every Condorcet ...
Abstract. The study of voting systems often takes place in the theoretical do-main due to a lack of ...
International audienceWe investigate the possibility of designing a voting rule that both meets the ...
The organization of US presidential elections make them potentially vulnerable to so-called “voting ...
The goal of this paper is to propose a comparison of four multi-winner voting rules, k-Plurality, k-...
We consider voting correspondences that are, besidesCondorcet Consistent, immune against the two str...
We provide intuitive, formal, and computational evidence that in a large society Condorcet's paradox...
We report in this note some results on the theoretical likelihood of Condorcet's Other Paradox in th...
Condorcet’s paradox occurs when there is no alternative that beats every other alternative by majori...
We consider two no-show paradoxes, in which a voter obtains a preferable outcome by abstaining from ...
Consider a group of individuals who have to collectively choose an outcome from a finite set of feas...
The No Show Paradox (there is a voter who would rather not vote) is known to affect every Condorcet ...
This book argues that strange election outcomes should become less likely as voters' preferences bec...
In this note, we formulate a condition describing the vulnerability of a social choice function to a...
More and more results from social choice theory are used to argue about collective decision making i...
The No Show Paradox (there is a voter who would rather not vote) is known to affect every Condorcet ...
Abstract. The study of voting systems often takes place in the theoretical do-main due to a lack of ...
International audienceWe investigate the possibility of designing a voting rule that both meets the ...
The organization of US presidential elections make them potentially vulnerable to so-called “voting ...
The goal of this paper is to propose a comparison of four multi-winner voting rules, k-Plurality, k-...
We consider voting correspondences that are, besidesCondorcet Consistent, immune against the two str...
We provide intuitive, formal, and computational evidence that in a large society Condorcet's paradox...