F Gouret, G Hollard, S Rossignol - Social Choice and Welfare, 2011 - shs.hal.science
Spatial models of voting have dominated mathematical political theory since the seminal work of Downs. The Downsian model assumes that each elector votes on the basis of his …
F Gouret, G Hollard, S Rossignol - Social Choice and Welfare, 2011 - infona.pl
Spatial models of voting have dominated mathematical political theory since the seminal work of Downs. The Downsian model assumes that each elector votes on the basis of his …
F Gouret, G Hollard, S Rossignol - Social Choice and Welfare, 2011 - ideas.repec.org
Spatial models of voting have dominated mathematical political theory since the seminal work of Downs. The Downsian model assumes that each elector votes on the basis of his …
F Gouret, G Hollard, S Rossignol - Social Choice and Welfare, 2011 - search.proquest.com
Spatial models of voting have dominated mathematical political theory since the seminal work of Downs. The Downsian model assumes that each elector votes on the basis of his …
F Gouret, G Hollard, S Rossignol - 2008 - pseweb.eu
The spatial analysis of electoral competition, starting with Downs (1959), relies on the hypothesis that electors vote on the basis of their utility functions, and that these functions …
F Gouret, G Hollard, S Rossignol - 2011 - econpapers.repec.org
Spatial models of voting have dominated mathematical political theory since the seminal work of Downs. The Downsian model assumes that each elector votes on the basis of his …
F Gouret, G Hollard, S Rossignol - Social Choice and Welfare, 2011 - hal.science
Spatial models of voting have dominated mathematical political theory since the seminal work of Downs. The Downsian model assumes that each elector votes on the basis of his …
F Gouret, G Hollard, S Rossignol - Social Choice & Welfare, 2011 - search.ebscohost.com
Spatial models of voting have dominated mathematical political theory since the seminal work of Downs. The Downsian model assumes that each elector votes on the basis of his …
[引用][C]An empirical analysis of valence in electoral competition