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Probabilistic Voting Theory

Peter Coughlin provides the most comprehensive and integrated analysis of probabilistic voting models to date.

Peter J. Coughlin (Author)

9780521360524, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 30 October 1992

268 pages, 4 b/w illus.
23.5 x 15.8 x 2.2 cm, 0.534 kg

"The book by P. Coughlin, one of the principal contributors to the probalistic voting theory, can be recommended as an up-to-date monograph on the subject, containing both original results and well-annotated references." Journal of Classification

Peter Coughlin provides the most comprehensive and integrated analysis of probabilistic voting models to date. Probabilistic voting theory is the mathematical prediction of candidate behaviour in, or in anticipation of, elections in which candidates are unsure of voters' preferences. The theory asks first whether optimal candidate strategies can be determined given uncertainty about voter preferences, and if so, what exactly those strategies are given various circumstances. It allows the theorist to predict what public policies will be supported and what laws passed by elected officials when in office and what positions will be taken by them when running in elections. One of the leading contributors to this rapidly developing literature, at the leading edge of public choice theory, Coughlin both reviews the existing literature and presents results that unify and extend developments in the theory.

Acknowledgements
1. Majority rule and models of elections
2. Income redistribution and electoral equilibria
3. Properties of the redistributional equilibria
4. A more general election model
5. Concave social and candidate objective functions
6. Directional, stationary and global electoral equilibria 7. Epilogue.

Subject Areas: Elections & referenda [JPHF]

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