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2.1: Introduction
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2.2: Preference Schedules
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2.3: Plurality
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2.4: What’s Wrong with Plurality?
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2.5: Insincere Voting
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2.6: Instant Runoff Voting
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2.7: What’s Wrong with IRV?
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2.8: Borda Count
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Borda Count is another voting method, named for Jean-Charles de Borda, who developed the system in 1770.
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2.9: What’s Wrong with Borda Count?
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Borda count is sometimes described as a consensus-based voting system, since it can sometimes choose a more broadly acceptable option over the one with majority support. In the example above, Tacoma is probably the best compromise location. This is a different approach than plurality and instant runoff voting that focus on first-choice votes; Borda Count considers every voter’s entire ranking to determine the outcome.
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2.10: Copeland’s Method (Pairwise Comparisons)
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So far none of our voting methods have satisfied the Condorcet Criterion. The Copeland Method specifically attempts to satisfy the Condorcet Criterion by looking at pairwise (one-to-one) comparisons.
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2.11: What’s Wrong with Copeland’s Method?
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2.12: So Where’s the Fair Method?
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Kenneth Arrow, was able to prove in 1949 that there is no voting method that will satisfy all the fairness criteria.
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2.13: Approval Voting
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Approval Voting is method of voting that can be more appropriate in some decision making scenarios. In this method, the ballot asks you to mark all choices that you find acceptable. The results are tallied, and the option with the most approval is the winner.
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2.14: What’s Wrong with Approval Voting?
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Approval voting can very easily violate the Majority Criterion.
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2.15: Voting in America
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In American politics, there is a lot more to selecting our representatives than simply casting and counting ballots. The process of selecting the president is even more complicated, so we’ll save that for the next chapter. Instead, let’s look at the process by which state congressional representatives and local politicians get elected.
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2.16: Exercises
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2.17: Concepts
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2.18: Exploration
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