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Standard Voting Power Indices Work: An Experimental Investigation of Pure Voting Power

Version 2 2024-06-04, 02:36
Version 1 2014-10-27, 17:01
conference contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 02:36 authored by C Geller, Jamie MustardJamie Mustard, R Shahwan
We evaluate the accuracy of power indices by experimentally measuring the political power embodied in blocks of votes per se. The experiment incorporates several subjects interacting in online chat rooms under supervision. Chat rooms and processes for selecting subjects reduce or eliminate extraneous political forces leaving logrolling as the primary political force. Results show that two standard power indices reflect voting power while other power indices and proportionality do not.

History

Pagination

1--

Location

Durham, England

Start date

2005-03-31

End date

2005-04-03

Language

eng

Notes

School working paper (Deakin University. School of Accounting, Economics and Finance) ; 2004/23 We evaluate the accuracy of power indices by experimentally measuring the political power embodied in blocks of votes per se. The experiment incorporates several subjects interacting in online chat rooms under supervision. Chat rooms and processes for selecting subjects reduce or eliminate extraneous political forces leaving logrolling as the primary political force. Results show that two standard power indices reflect voting power while other power indices and proportionality do not.

Publication classification

E2 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed

Copyright notice

2005, University of Durham

Editor/Contributor(s)

J Ashworth

Title of proceedings

EPCS 2005 : Papers of the Annual Meeting of the European Public Choice Society 2005

Publisher

School of Accounting, Economics and Finance, Deakin University

Place of publication

Geelong, Vic.

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