Presented By: Department of Mathematics
Democracy Inaction: Why our elections are unfair
Roger Nelson, Lewis & Clark College
Public Lecture
American presidential primaries are examples of multicandidate elections in which plurality usually determines the winner. Is this the "best" way to decide who wins? While plurality is a common procedure, it has serious flaws. Are there alternative procedures that are in some sense more "fair?" How do we determine the "fairness" of an election procedure? With no more mathematics than arithmetic (to count votes), we will examine some alternate procedures and fairness criteria.
American presidential primaries are examples of multicandidate elections in which plurality usually determines the winner. Is this the "best" way to decide who wins? While plurality is a common procedure, it has serious flaws. Are there alternative procedures that are in some sense more "fair?" How do we determine the "fairness" of an election procedure? With no more mathematics than arithmetic (to count votes), we will examine some alternate procedures and fairness criteria.
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