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Social choice and legitimacy: the possibilities of impossibility

Part of the Political economy of institutions and decisions series
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Governing requires choices, and hence trade-offs between conflicting goals or criteria.

This book asserts that legitimate governance requires explanations for such trade-offs and then demonstrates that such explanations can always be found, though not for every possible choice.

In so doing, John W. Patty and Elizabeth Maggie Penn use the tools of social choice theory to provide a new and discriminating theory of legitimacy.

In contrast with both earlier critics and defenders of social choice theory, Patty and Penn argue that the classic impossibility theorems of Arrow, Gibbard, and Satterthwaite are inescapably relevant to, and indeed justify, democratic institutions.

Specifically, these institutions exist to do more than simply make policy - through their procedures and proceedings, these institutions make sense of the trade-offs required when controversial policy decisions must be made.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1139897810 / 9781139897815
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
320.101
30/07/2014
England
English
207 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Previously issued in print: 2014 Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.