I'm starting up an "election-methods-list" list to discuss single-winner reform, the relative merits of different PR systems, and the technical underpinnings of all election methods. This list is intended to compliment, not to replace, the existing "elections-reform" list. Please continue to discuss the various electoral reform movements in the U.S. and throughout the world in the "elections-reform" list. "elections-reform" is still the best forum for discussing strategies used in reform campaigns, specific legislation addressing reform, and educational material about reform. What is the difference, you ask? "election-methods-list" discussions will most likely be more technical in nature, with the ultimate goal of providing recommendations and educational material to the members of "elections-reform". There have been complaints in the past that discussions on "elections-reform" have been too technical, and "election-methods-list" has been created to offload the more prolific technical discussions to "elections-reform". It lets folks use "elections-reform" to stay abreast of current activity in electoral reform without fear of their inbox exploding. To subscribe to "election-methods-list", send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with no subject line (any subject will be ignored), and the following one line in the body of your message: subscribe election-methods-list My apologies to anybody who stumbled on the web page that I set up a week ago at http://www.eskimo.com/~robla/cpr/election-methods.html and tried to subscribe (and failed, because the list didn't exist yet). In the time I was waiting for the list to get set up, I set up the web page. Everything should *now* work according to the instructions on that page. That's all there is to it. Let me know if you have any questions about the new list. Thanks, Rob Lanphier [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.eskimo.com/~robla
