[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] In a matching problem between students and schools, a mechanism is said to be robustly stable if it is stable, strategy-proof, and immune to a combined manipulation, where a student first misreports her preferences and then blocks the matching that is produced by the mechanism. We find that even when school priorities are publicly known and only students can behave strategically, there is a priority structure for which no robustly stable mechanism exists. Our main result shows that there exists a robustly stable mechanism if and only if the priority structure of schools is acyclic (Ergin, 2002), and in that case, the student-optimal stable mechanis...
In large centralized matching markets like school choice problems participants usually submit prefer...
In a school choice context we show that considering only schools ’ priorities and the set of accepta...
A stable matching rule is used as the outcome function for the Admission game where colleges behave ...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] In a m...
We introduce a new stability notion called preference respecting stability that incorporates toleran...
We propose a solution to the conflict between fairness and efficiency in one-sided matching markets....
We identify a new channel through which schools can potentially manipulate the well known student an...
We investigate markets with a set of students on one side and a set of colleges on the other. A stud...
We introduce a new class of matching mechanisms—quantile stable mechanisms—that generate stable matc...
We introduce a new class of matching mechanisms—quantile stable mechanisms—that generate stable matc...
We introduce a new class of matching mechanisms—quantile stable mechanisms—that generate stable matc...
A stylized fact of most centralized matching markets (for example school choice problems is that pa...
We consider school choice problems (Abdulkadiroğlu and Sönmez, 2003) where students are assigned to ...
We consider school choice problems (Abdulkadiroğlu and Sönmez, 2003) where students are assigned to ...
One of the important functions of many markets and social processes is to match one kind of agent wi...
In large centralized matching markets like school choice problems participants usually submit prefer...
In a school choice context we show that considering only schools ’ priorities and the set of accepta...
A stable matching rule is used as the outcome function for the Admission game where colleges behave ...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] In a m...
We introduce a new stability notion called preference respecting stability that incorporates toleran...
We propose a solution to the conflict between fairness and efficiency in one-sided matching markets....
We identify a new channel through which schools can potentially manipulate the well known student an...
We investigate markets with a set of students on one side and a set of colleges on the other. A stud...
We introduce a new class of matching mechanisms—quantile stable mechanisms—that generate stable matc...
We introduce a new class of matching mechanisms—quantile stable mechanisms—that generate stable matc...
We introduce a new class of matching mechanisms—quantile stable mechanisms—that generate stable matc...
A stylized fact of most centralized matching markets (for example school choice problems is that pa...
We consider school choice problems (Abdulkadiroğlu and Sönmez, 2003) where students are assigned to ...
We consider school choice problems (Abdulkadiroğlu and Sönmez, 2003) where students are assigned to ...
One of the important functions of many markets and social processes is to match one kind of agent wi...
In large centralized matching markets like school choice problems participants usually submit prefer...
In a school choice context we show that considering only schools ’ priorities and the set of accepta...
A stable matching rule is used as the outcome function for the Admission game where colleges behave ...