Referring to a standard context of voting theory, and to the classic notion of voting situation, here we show that it is possible to observe any arbitrary set of elections' outcomes, no matter how paradoxical it may appear. In this respect, we consider a set of candidates 1, 2, . . . , m and, for any subset A of {1, 2, . . . , m}, we fix a ranking among the candidates belonging to A. We wonder whether it is possible to find a population of voters whose preferences, expressed according to the Condorcet's proposal, give rise to that family of rankings. We will show that, whatever be such family, a population of voters can be constructed that realize all the rankings of it. Our conclusions are similar to those coming from D. Saari's results. O...
International audienceWe compare the Condorcet Efficiencies of the plurality rule, the negative plur...
For any non-trivial voting system, there exists manipulable situations where a coalition of voters, ...
We study how voting rules shape voter coordination in large three-candidate elections. We consider t...
Referring to a standard context of voting theory, and to the classic notion of voting situation, her...
Winner selection by majority, in elections between two candidates, is the only rule compatible with ...
Among all existing paradoxes of voting, the one pointed out by Condorcet has managed to become known...
This paper attacks a problem like the one addressed in an earlier work (Potthoff, 2013) but is more...
International audience<p>One main concern of voting theory is to determine a procedure for choosing ...
International audienceWe compare the Condorcet Efficiencies of the plurality rule, the negative plur...
We consider several types of information with which to differentiate preferential ballot voting syst...
Democratic societies base much of their decisions on voting procedures that involve aggregation of i...
In the standard model of voting, it is assumed that a voting rule observes the ranked preferences of...
General conclusions relating pairwise tallies with positional (e.g., plurality, antiplurality (``vot...
Classical voting rules output a winning alternative (or a nonempty set of tied alternatives). Social...
The typical paradigm in voting theory involves n voters and m candidates. Every voter ranks the can...
International audienceWe compare the Condorcet Efficiencies of the plurality rule, the negative plur...
For any non-trivial voting system, there exists manipulable situations where a coalition of voters, ...
We study how voting rules shape voter coordination in large three-candidate elections. We consider t...
Referring to a standard context of voting theory, and to the classic notion of voting situation, her...
Winner selection by majority, in elections between two candidates, is the only rule compatible with ...
Among all existing paradoxes of voting, the one pointed out by Condorcet has managed to become known...
This paper attacks a problem like the one addressed in an earlier work (Potthoff, 2013) but is more...
International audience<p>One main concern of voting theory is to determine a procedure for choosing ...
International audienceWe compare the Condorcet Efficiencies of the plurality rule, the negative plur...
We consider several types of information with which to differentiate preferential ballot voting syst...
Democratic societies base much of their decisions on voting procedures that involve aggregation of i...
In the standard model of voting, it is assumed that a voting rule observes the ranked preferences of...
General conclusions relating pairwise tallies with positional (e.g., plurality, antiplurality (``vot...
Classical voting rules output a winning alternative (or a nonempty set of tied alternatives). Social...
The typical paradigm in voting theory involves n voters and m candidates. Every voter ranks the can...
International audienceWe compare the Condorcet Efficiencies of the plurality rule, the negative plur...
For any non-trivial voting system, there exists manipulable situations where a coalition of voters, ...
We study how voting rules shape voter coordination in large three-candidate elections. We consider t...