
We study axioms which define "representative democracy" in an environment in which agents vote over a finite set of alternatives. We focus on a property that states that whether votes are aggregated directly or indirectly makes no difference. We call this property representative consistency. Representative consistency formalizes the idea that a voting rule should be immune to gerrymandering. We characterize the class of rules satisfying unanimity, anonymity, and representative consistency. We call these rules "partial priority rules." A partial priority rule can be interpreted as a rule in which each agent can "veto" certain alternatives. We investigate the implications of imposing other axioms to the list specified above. We also study the partial priority rules in the context of specific economic models.
I would like to thank John Duggan, Larry Epstein, Biung-Ghi Ju, Roger Lagunoff, Leonardo Martinez, Josef Perktold, Francesco Squintani, William Thomson, and Chun-Hsien Yeh for useful conversations. All errors are my own.
Submitted - sswp1217.pdf
majority rule, 330, Majority rule, Gerrymandering, social choice, Social choice, gerrymandering, Representative systems, representative democracy, Social choice, representative systems, majority rule, gerrymandering, representative systems, Voting theory
majority rule, 330, Majority rule, Gerrymandering, social choice, Social choice, gerrymandering, Representative systems, representative democracy, Social choice, representative systems, majority rule, gerrymandering, representative systems, Voting theory
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