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capabilities 2 freedom 2 social choice 2 voting 2 welfarism 2 Arrow impossibility theorem 1 Arrow's Theorem 1 Sen impossibility theorem 1 aggregation theory 1 axiomatic approach 1 capability approach 1 classical problem of fair division 1 compensation 1 conditional equality 1 consistency 1 converse consistency 1 core equivalence 1 dictatorship 1 domain restrictions 1 dominant strategies 1 egalitarian equivalence 1 egalitarian-equivalence 1 equal opportunities 1 equal opportunity 1 equivalent opportunities 1 fairness 1 functionings 1 fuzzy preferences 1 fuzzy sets 1 general equilibrium 1 impossibility theorems 1 incentive compatibility 1 individual choices 1 individual rights 1 indivisible goods 1 information 1 lower bounds on welfares 1 natural reward 1 no-envy 1 non-homogeneous continuum 1
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Undetermined 16
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Article 16
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Arrow, K. J. 16 Sen, A. K. 16 Suzumura, K. 16 Sen, Amartya 2 Suzumura, Kotaro 2 Arrow, Kenneth 1 Arrow, Kenneth J. 1 Baigent, Nicholas 1 Barberà, Salvador 1 Coughlin, Peter 1 Deb, Rajat 1 François, Maniquet 1 James E., Foster 1 Kaushik, Basu 1 Le Breton, Michel 1 Lòpez-Calva, Luis F. 1 Marc, Fleurbaey 1 Maurice, Salles 1 Peter J., Hammond 1 Richard, Barrett 1 Saari, Donald G. 1 Thomson, William 1 Weymark, John A. 1
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Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare 16
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RePEc 16
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Chapter Fifteen - Competitive Market Mechanisms as Social Choice Procedures
Peter J., Hammond - In: Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare
A competitive market mechanism is a prominent example of a nonbinary social choice rule, typically defined for a special class of economic environments in which each social state is an economic allocation of private goods, and individuals’ preferences concern only their own personal...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009318726
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Chapter Seventeen - Arrovian Social Choice Theory on Economic Domains
Le Breton, Michel; Weymark, John A. - In: Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare
This article surveys the literature that investigates the consistency of Arrow's social choice axioms when his unrestricted domain assumptions are replaced by domain conditions that incorporate the restrictions on agendas and preferences encountered in economic environments. Both social welfare...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009318727
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Chapter Twenty-Five - Strategyproof Social Choice
Barberà, Salvador - In: Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare
This chapter surveys the literature on strategy proofness from a historical perspective. While I discuss the connections with other works on incentives in mechanism design, the main emphasis is on social choice models.
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009318729
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Chapter Twenty-Three - Welfarism, Individual Rights, and Procedural Fairness
Suzumura, Kotaro - In: Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare
Ever since Sen crystallized the logical conflict between the welfaristic value of the Pareto principle and the nonwelfaristic value of individual libertarian rights into what he christened the impossibility of a Paretian liberal, there have been many attempts in social choice theory to...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009318730
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Chapter Twenty - Social Choice with Fuzzy Preferences
Richard, Barrett; Maurice, Salles - In: Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare
Fuzzy set theory has been explicitly introduced to deal with vagueness and ambiguity. One can also use probability theory or techniques borrowed from philosophical logic. In this chapter, we consider fuzzy preferences and we survey the literature on aggregation of fuzzy preferences. We restrict...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009318731
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Chapter Twenty-One - Fair Allocation Rules
Thomson, William - In: Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare
We review the theory of fairness as it pertains to concretely specified problems of resource allocations. We present punctual notions designed to evaluate how well individuals, or groups, are treated in relation to one another: no-envy, egalitarian-equivalence, individual and collective lower or...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009318732
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Chapter Twenty-Two - Compensation and Responsibilityprotect
Marc, Fleurbaey; François, Maniquet - In: Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare
Many distributive issues involve situations in which initial characteristics make individuals unequal. In view of prevailing moral sentiments, some of these characteristics call for compensating transfers, and some do not. We study the literature on this problem of compensation. This literature...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009318733
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Chapter Twenty-Four - Freedom, Opportunity, and Well-Being
James E., Foster - In: Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare
This paper reexamines key results from the measurement of opportunity freedom, or the extent to which a set of options offers a decision maker real opportunities to achieve. Three cases are investigated: no preferences, a single preference, and plural preferences. The three corresponding...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009318734
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Chapter Nineteen - Nonbinary Social Choice
Deb, Rajat - In: Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare
Economists have used the term “nonbinary” to describe both choice functional nonbinariness (choice functions that cannot be rationalized as the maximizing outcome of a binary preference relation) and structural nonbinariness (the structure of the model dictates that pairs of alternatives do...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009318736
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Chapter Fourteen - The Informational Basis of Social Choiceprotect
Sen, Amartya - In: Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare
Any procedure of social choice makes use of some types of information and ignores others. For example, the method of majority decision concentrates on people's votes, but pays no direct attention to, say, their social standings, or their prosperity or penury, or even the intensities of their...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009318738
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