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Collective Decision-Making: Social Choice and Political Economy [electronic resource] by Schofield, Norman

Book Information

TitleCollective Decision-Making: Social Choice and Political Economy [electronic resource]
CreatorSchofield, Norman
Year1996
PPI600
PublisherDordrecht : Springer Netherlands
LanguageEnglish
Mediatypetexts
SubjectSocial sciences, Social sciences
ISBN9789401587679, 9401587671
Collectionfolkscanomy_miscellaneous, folkscanomy, additional_collections
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Identifierspringer_10.1007-978-94-015-8767-9
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Collective Decision-Making: Social Choice and Political EconomyAuthor: Norman Schofield Published by Springer Netherlands ISBN: 978-90-481-5800-3 DOI: 10.1007/978-94-015-8767-9Table of Contents:Introduction: Research Programs in Preference and Belief Aggregation An Introduction to Arrovian Social Welfare Functions on Economic and Political Domains Social Ranking of Allocations with and without Coalition Formation Non Binary Social Choice: A Brief Introduction Election Relations and a Partial Ordering for Positional Voting Electing Legislatures Preference-Based Stability: Experiments on Cooperative Solutions to Majority Rule Games The Heart of a Polity Refinements of the Heart Bargaining in the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan An Analysis of the Euskarian Parliament Extending a Dynamic Model of Protocoalition Formation The Sequential Dynamics of Cabinet Formation, Stochastic Error, and a Test of Competing Models Subgame-Perfect Portfolio Allocations in Parliamentary Government Formation The Costs of Coalition: The Italian Anomaly Models of Interest Groups: Four Different Approaches Partisan Electoral Cycles and Monetary Policy Games Hypothesis Testing and Collective Decision-Making Political Discourse, Factions, and the General Will: Correlated Voting and Condorcet’s Jury Theorem, This volume is intended to provide a broad perspective on collective decision-making, presenting economic and political aspects from both a theoretical and empirical viewpoint. The four chapters in the first section of the book give new results in Social Choice Theory, showing how the Arrow Impossibility Theorem applies in both economic and political decisions, and analyzing generalized Borda voting methods. The second section examines elections and committees, by setting up a formal approach to study the election of a legislature by presenting new experimental work on voting in committees, and by outlining a unified theory of political choice. The third section examines decision-making in multiparty politics (including detailed theoretical and empirical study of a number of democracies). The fourth section on political economy covers interest groups, electoral cycles and a formal discussion of the `general will'. We need to understand all the properties of coalitions and coalition-formation in order to appreciate and interpret politics ... This volume summarizes what we have learned. - from the Foreword by William Riker, 1 Introduction: Research Programs in Preference and Belief Aggregation -- I. Social Choice -- 2 An Introduction to Arrovian Social Welfare Functions on Economic and Political Domains -- 3 Social Ranking of Allocations with and without Coalition Formation -- 4 Non Binary Social Choice: A Brief Introduction -- 5 Election Relations and a Partial Ordering for Positional Voting -- II. Elections and Committees -- 6 Electing Legislatures -- 7 Preference-Based Stability: Experiments on Cooperative Solutions to Majority Rule Games -- 8 The Heart of a Polity -- 9 Refinements of the Heart -- III. Coalition Governments -- 10 Bargaining in the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan -- 11 An Analysis of the Euskarian Parliament -- 12 Extending a Dynamic Model of Protocoalition Formation -- 13 The Sequential Dynamics of Cabinet Formation, Stochastic Error, and a Test of Competing Models -- 14 Subgame-Perfect Portfolio Allocations in Parliamentary Government Formation -- 15 The Costs of Coalition: The Italian Anomaly -- IV. Political Economy -- 16 Models of Interest Groups: Four Different Approaches -- 17 Partisan Electoral Cycles and Monetary Policy Games -- 18 Hypothesis Testing and Collective Decision-Making -- 19 Political Discourse, Factions, and the General Will: Correlated Voting and Condorcet's Jury Theorem -- Name Index