On Sep 5, 2008, at 2:13 , Raph Frank wrote:

On Thu, Sep 4, 2008 at 10:13 PM, Juho <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
One simple approach would be to ask the voters directly about the
(physical/mental) distances. The answers could be of e.g.
Village1>Village2>Village3>... There could be more villages on the
questionnaire than there will be districts.

I suggested something similar a while back.  Basically, you assume
that each resident ranks all the residents in order of distance.

You then hold a PR-STV election with 'seats' equal to the number of districts.

The winners then become the centres of the districts.

Ofc, under that system, the voters don't actually get to vote.

If voters were going to vote, maybe they could have less accuracy as
they go further away (e.g. the nearest 5 villages appear but
eventually it is only towns, then only cities).  Also, it would be a
nightmare to count without computers.

My plan was that the voters would actually vote, and not only to indicate physical distances but also other preferences. That would mean that village that is near but on the other side of the river (and without a bridge) would not be ranked high. There would be probably good correlation with driving time but there are also many other factors. Maybe one favours the direction where one works, where one's relatives live, where people speak the same language or have the same religion, historically associated areas, areas with similar needs, areas with similar minded people etc.

Use of computers in the vote counting phase should nowadays be ok.

Juho





                
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