The following pages link to M. Remzi Sanver (Q449048):
Displaying 50 items.
- (Q250594) (redirect page) (← links)
- On the manipulability of voting rules: the case of \(4\) and \(5\) alternatives (Q449050) (← links)
- Social choice without the Pareto principle under weak independence (Q485435) (← links)
- One-way monotonicity as a form of strategy-proofness (Q532698) (← links)
- Is abstention an escape from Arrow's theorem? (Q535402) (← links)
- A new monotonicity condition for tournament solutions (Q708800) (← links)
- Stereotype formation as trait aggregation (Q732927) (← links)
- Sophisticated preference aggregation (Q734046) (← links)
- Characterizations of majoritarianism: a unified approach (Q734051) (← links)
- Equilibrium allocations of endowment-pretension games in public good economies (Q862743) (← links)
- Dictatorial domains in preference aggregation (Q866931) (← links)
- A characterization of the Copeland solution (Q985210) (← links)
- Strategy-proofness of the plurality rule over restricted domains (Q1014329) (← links)
- Expected utility consistent extensions of preferences (Q1036099) (← links)
- Choosers as extension axioms (Q1036106) (← links)
- Another characterization of the majority rule. (Q1605274) (← links)
- Which dictatorial domains are superdictatorial? A complete characterization for the Gibbard-Satterthwaite impossibility (Q1645204) (← links)
- Absolute qualified majoritarianism: how does the threshold matter? (Q1672882) (← links)
- Revisiting the connection between the no-show paradox and monotonicity (Q1680090) (← links)
- Evaluationwise strategy-proofness (Q1682726) (← links)
- Strong equilibrium outcomes of voting games are the generalized Condorcet winners (Q1762845) (← links)
- Scoring rules cannot respect majority in choice and elimination simultaneously (Q1867805) (← links)
- Maskin monotonic aggregation rules (Q1929089) (← links)
- Nash implementation of the majority rule (Q1929117) (← links)
- On the alternating use of ``unanimity'' and ``surjectivity'' in the Gibbard-Satterthwaite theorem (Q1934106) (← links)
- A solution to the two-person implementation problem (Q2025052) (← links)
- Anonymous, neutral, and resolute social choice revisited (Q2058841) (← links)
- Correction to: ``Anonymous, neutral, and resolute social choice revisited'' (Q2058842) (← links)
- An Arrovian impossibility in combining ranking and evaluation (Q2058868) (← links)
- The relationship between Arrow's and Wilson's theorems on restricted domains (Q2070578) (← links)
- Monotonicity violations under plurality with a runoff: the case of French presidential elections (Q2171858) (← links)
- Metrizable preferences over preferences (Q2217354) (← links)
- Recovering non-monotonicity problems of voting rules (Q2244413) (← links)
- On the subgame perfect implementability of voting rules (Q2244426) (← links)
- Nash implementing social choice rules with restricted ranges (Q2318117) (← links)
- The Tiebout hypothesis under membership property rights (Q2353590) (← links)
- Simple collective identity functions (Q2380519) (← links)
- On combining implementable social choice rules (Q2384429) (← links)
- A general impossibility result on strategy-proof social choice hyperfunctions (Q2389312) (← links)
- Restricting the domain allows for weaker independence (Q2417372) (← links)
- Arrovian impossibilities in aggregating preferences over non-resolute outcomes (Q2426966) (← links)
- Ensuring Pareto optimality by referendum voting (Q2431824) (← links)
- Nash implementation via hyperfunctions (Q2432512) (← links)
- On domains that admit well-behaved strategy-proof social choice functions (Q2447057) (← links)
- Monotonicity properties and their adaptation to irresolute social choice rules (Q2450081) (← links)
- A characterization of superdictatorial domains for strategy-proof social choice functions (Q2463577) (← links)
- Strategy-proof resolute social choice correspondences (Q2467525) (← links)
- Nash implementing non-monotonic social choice rules by awards (Q2494020) (← links)
- Minimal monotonic extensions of scoring rules (Q2500719) (← links)
- Voting games of resolute social choice correspondences (Q2516133) (← links)