Disclaimer: I am quite sorry that my e-mail does not really fit the aims of 
this mailing list, but I found no other solution to contact specialists of 
voting theory...

Hi everyone,

I am a French researcher in mathematics (rather a specialist of probability 
actually); I have decided to write a popularization paper on the mathematical 
aspects of voting theory, as a contribution to a French website called Images 
des Mathématiques (http://images.math.cnrs.fr/), which website is devoted to 
popularization of (contemporary) mathematical research. My aim is to explain 
the main problematics linked to voting theory, with a stress on the 
mathematical (or game-theoretical) aspects of this theory. After an 
introduction dealing with the general aims of voting and the ambiguousness of 
the concept of collective choice, my article would explain the main criteria 
desirable for devising a voting system, state some great impossibility results, 
and finally compare some particular voting systems. Among other things, I would 
like to handle the (linked) questions of strategic voting and probabilistic 
voting systems. My article would remain focused on the single-winner problem 
and would contain no discussion at all on the practical aspects of designing a 
voting protocol.

Of course, I have found much valuable information on these topics over the 
Internet (just the Wikipedia "voting system" page is quite remarkable), and 
certainly I already have the material to write some good and rather complete 
article. However, I would also like to get a good reference on the topic, 
typically a (not-too-old?) book written by a researcher, with the triple goal 
of (i) getting more complete, better-organized information, (ii) giving greater 
authority to my article by quoting a book rather than just Wikipedia or other 
webpages, and (iii) suggesting a good reading for those readers of my future 
article who would like to go further. The problem is, I have found several 
titles of such books, but I have no idea of which ones are better-written, more 
complete, better fitted to my goals, more "classical" or easier to find...

This is why I am asking you which references you would advise to me as the main 
source for my future article (obviously I will not be able to  or even read all 
of them, so I have to make a choice...). Hoping for your kind answers!


Sincerely yours,

Rémi Peyre
Assistant Professor, École des Mines de Nancy (France)
[email protected]
http://www.normalesup.org/~rpeyre/pro/index-en.html

----
Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info

Reply via email to