Measures of Agreement in Voters’ Preferences
William V. Gehrlein and
Dominique Lepelley
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William V. Gehrlein: University of Delaware
Chapter Chapter 3 in Elections, Voting Rules and Paradoxical Outcomes, 2017, pp 59-83 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract The impact that adding varying degrees of internal structure to voters’ preferences has on the probability of observing Condorcet’s Paradox is considered, by defining the restrictions on voters’ preferences on candidates so that the electorate is behaving in accord with each of several models of rational behavior. Proximity measures are introduced to determine the minimum proportion α of voters’ preference rankings that must be ignored for the remaining voters to have preferences that are in perfect agreement with each of the models of restricted preferences. While it is expected that the probability of observing Condorcet’s Paradox should consistently change as α increases, this outcome is not observed for all of the models. The strongest consistent relationship is found to exist for those models that are based on group mutual coherence that assume that voters can mutually agree on an underlying ordering of candidates along a common dimension.
Date: 2017
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:stcchp:978-3-319-64659-6_3
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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-64659-6_3
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