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Fair Representation: Meeting the Ideal of One Man, One Vote

TLDR
Balinski and Young as discussed by the authors developed a theory of fair representation that establishes various principles for translating state populations or vote totals of parties into a fair allocation of congressional seats using U.S. history as a guide.
Abstract
The issue of fair representation will take center stage as U.S. congressional districts are reapportioned based on the 2000 Census. Using U.S. history as a guide, the authors develop a theory of fair representation that establishes various principles for translating state populations --or vote totals of parties --into a fair allocation of congressional seats. They conclude that the current apportionment formula cheats the larger states in favor of the smaller, contrary to the intentions of the founding fathers and compromising the Supreme Court's ""one man, one vote"" rulings. Balinski and Young interweave the theoretical development with a rich historical account of controversies over representation, and show how many of these principles grew out of political contests in the course of United States history. The result is a work that is at once history, politics, and popular science. The book --updated with data from the 1980 and 1990 Census counts --vividly demonstrates that apportionment deals with the very substance of political power.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Proportionality, disproportionality and electoral systems

TL;DR: Different PR methods should be seen not as being more proportional or less proportional than each other but as embodying different ideas as to what maximizing proportionality means and, by extension, what minimizing disproportionality means as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Political Consequences of Electoral Laws, 1945-85

TL;DR: In this article, a systematic analysis of the relationships between the main electoral system variables (electoral formula, district magnitude, and ballot structure) and electoral outcomes (the degrees of disproportionality and multipartism) in the 20 Western democracies from 1945 to 1985, representing 32 distinct electoral systems (an electoral system being defined as a set of elections held under basically the same rules) is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some compelling intuitions about group consensus decisions, theoretical and empirical research, and interpersonal aggregation phenomena: Selected examples 1950–1990☆

TL;DR: In this article, an example of apparent intuition-based assumptions about group decision-making behavior from each of the past four decades is discussed in detail: (a) Group superiority relative to individual performance, the fifties; exaggerated group risk-taking relative to individuals, the sixties; group size and performance level, the seventies; and (d) decision making performance of free discussion groups and (implicit) procedural constraints, the eighties.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficient rounding of approximate designs

TL;DR: The efficient rounding method is a multiplier method of apportionment which otherwise is known as the method of John Quincy Adams or the methodof smallest divisors.
Book ChapterDOI

Chapter 4 Voting procedures

TL;DR: This work discusses broad classes of social choice functions as well as special cases such as plurality rule, approval voting, and Borda's point-count method for voting procedures for two-candidate elections.