[Home]Voting system

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Changed: 1,2c1,2
Voting systems are methods of choosing between different options. They are most commonly used
in elections, but are also used for many other purposes: to award prizes, to select between different plans of action,
Voting systems are methods of choosing between different options. They are most commonly used
in elections, but are also used for many other purposes: to award prizes, to select between different plans of action,

Changed: 27c27
*Instant runoff voting (also called Alternative Vote)
*Instant Runoff Voting (also called Alternative Vote)

Changed: 30c30
*Condorcets Method
*Condorcet's Method

Added: 32a33,36

None of the Above




In all of these systems, there is a choice about whether to include an option to vote against filling the seat. This is implemented in different systems, sometimes by erecting a threshold which winning candidates must pass, sometimes by entering a theoretical "None of the above" candidate into the running.


Changed: 36c40
*[Google Category on Voting Systems]
*[ODP Category on Voting Systems]

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Voting systems are methods of choosing between different options. They are most commonly used in elections, but are also used for many other purposes: to award prizes, to select between different plans of action, or even by computer programs to evaluate which solution is best for a complex problem.

Considerations in making a good voting system

It is impossible for any one system to be "perfect", because some of the considerations in what makes a voting system good are contradictory. For example, if one candidate is intensely popular among most people and intensely unpopular among the rest, are they better or worse than a candidate universally accepted unenthusiastically? Different voting systems draw the lines in different places. These are some of the considerations many people take into account when evaluating a voting system:

Systems

Most voting systems fall under one of the following categories, or are a hybrid of two or more categories:

None of the Above

In all of these systems, there is a choice about whether to include an option to vote against filling the seat. This is implemented in different systems, sometimes by erecting a threshold which winning candidates must pass, sometimes by entering a theoretical "None of the above" candidate into the running.

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Last edited December 5, 2001 11:59 pm by Zundark (diff)
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