The separability principle in single-peaked economies with participation constraints
From MaRDI portal
Publication:899384
DOI10.1016/J.MATHSOCSCI.2015.09.004zbMath1331.91108OpenAlexW2192035873MaRDI QIDQ899384
Gustavo Bergantiños, Sunyoung Kim, Youngsub Chun
Publication date: 28 December 2015
Published in: Mathematical Social Sciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mathsocsci.2015.09.004
Individual preferences (91B08) Resource and cost allocation (including fair division, apportionment, etc.) (91B32)
Cites Work
- The division problem with voluntary participation
- When too little is as good as nothing at all: rationing a disposable good among satiable people with acceptance thresholds
- Equal or proportional division of a surplus, and other methods
- An alternative characterization of the uniform rule
- Resource-monotonic solutions to the problem of fair division when preferences are single-peaked
- The replacement principle in economies with single-peaked preferences
- Population-monotonic solutions to the problem of fair division when preferences are single-peaked
- Choosing the level of a public good when agents have an outside option
- A note on Thomson's characterizations of the uniform rule
- Two characterizations of the uniform rule for division problems with single-peaked preferences
- Equivalence of axioms for bankruptcy problems
- The division problem under constraints
- A simple characterization of the uniform rule
- Agreement, separability, and other axioms for quasi-linear social choice problems
- The separability principle in economies with single-peaked preferences
- A note on the separability principle in economies with single-peaked preferences
- Independence of Irrelevant Alternatives and Revealed Group Preferences
- The Division Problem with Single-Peaked Preferences: A Characterization of the Uniform Allocation Rule
- Consistency, monotonicity, and the uniform rule
This page was built for publication: The separability principle in single-peaked economies with participation constraints