Voting power measurement: a story of misreinvention |
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Authors: | Dan S. Felsenthal Moshé Machover |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel 3. CPNSS, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK 2. King's College, London, UK 4. 5 Milman Road, Queen's Park, London, NW6 6EN, UK
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Abstract: | In this account of the history of voting-power measurement, we confine ourselves to the concept of a priori voting power. We show how the concept was re-invented several times and how the circumstances in which it was reinvented led to conceptual confusion as to the true meaning of what is being measured. In particular, power-as-influence was conflated with value in the sense of transferable utility cooperative game theory (power as share in constant total payoff). Influence was treated, improperly, as though it were transferable utility, and hence an additive and distributive quantity. We provide examples of the resulting misunderstanding and mis-directed criticism. |
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