1 / 15

Voting Blocs in Academic Divisions of CLU: A Mathematical Explanation of Faculty Power

Voting Blocs in Academic Divisions of CLU: A Mathematical Explanation of Faculty Power. Andrea Katz April 29, 2004 Advisor: Dr. Karrolyne Fogel. Definitions. Coalition : Any collection of voters in a yes-no voting system

morela
Télécharger la présentation

Voting Blocs in Academic Divisions of CLU: A Mathematical Explanation of Faculty Power

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Voting Blocs in Academic Divisions of CLU: A Mathematical Explanation of Faculty Power Andrea Katz April 29, 2004 Advisor: Dr. Karrolyne Fogel

  2. Definitions • Coalition: Any collection of voters in a yes-no voting system • Voting Bloc: An organized group of voters (unit) all casting the same vote in a yes-no system. Coalitions exist within voting blocs. • Pivotal Player: A voter in the system that, by joining a coalition, turns it from a losing coalition to a winning coalition.

  3. The Shapley-Shubik Index of Power • Defined as: • Yields a player’s probability of being pivotal • Being pivotal tells us the chance of a voter has to make a difference of swaying the outcome of the vote

  4. Example We need 51 votes to pass Suppose Dr. Wyels casts 50 votes, Dr. Fogel casts 49, and Andrea casts 1 vote. The six possible orderings for the system are: Joining 1st 2nd 3rd W F A W A F F W A F A W AW F A F W Dr. Wyels is pivotal 4/6 of the time = 67% Dr. Fogel is pivotal 1/6 of the time = 17% Andrea is pivotal 1/6 of the time = 17%

  5. Humanities (H) 23 Social Sciences (S) 19 Creative Arts (C) 16 Natural Sciences (N) 20 For a total of 78 voters Need 40 votes to pass 30% 24% 20% 26% If no division forms a bloc A More Familiar Example:The College of Arts and Sciences Number of voting faculty Percentage of Power

  6. Index of Power for the blocis given by: The other groups in the system have power g = the size of the group What if One Division Forms a Bloc?

  7. N pivots What if Two Divisions Form a Bloc?For example, N and H H votes before N H votes after N N = 1 H = 1 C = 16 S = 19 N Other H H1-37 N votes before H N votes after H H H Pivots Other N N axis 1-37

  8. Some Results for HCNS N does not organize N organizes N H N H H does not organize H organizes

  9. C N S H [16 : 20, 19, 1, … , 1] 0 1 need 5 – 20 1s 1 0 need 4 – 19 1s 1 1 need 0 1s What if Three Divisions Form a Bloc?HCNSThe Power Polynomial Consider C = 16 p = probability an event occurs. Let the event be that a voter votes yes (p – 1) = probability event does not occur 23 of these

  10. 3 Blocs Cont’d = 0.2760256410

  11. Analysis of 3 Blocs on the Hypercube! H C N S(42,8,25,25) H C N S H C N S H C NS H C N S(10,28,32,30) H C NS HC N S(41,17,21,20) H CN S(26,18,34,22) HC NS H C NS(x,x,28,21) HC N S(30,x,22,x) H C N S(30,21,26,24) HC N S H C N S(26,18,23,32) H C N S H C N S(28,25,24,23)

  12. A Slice of the Cube H C N S(10,28,32,30) ? H C N S(26,18,34,22) H C NS( x, x,28,21) When N organizes, S should not, for it loses 1%. When S organizes N should definitely organize! H C N S(30,21,26,24) H C N S(26,18,23,32) H C N S(41,17,21,20)

  13. Sources • Straffin, Philip D. Game Theory and Strategy. Washington. The Mathematical Association of America. 1993 • Straffin, Philip D. The Power of Voting Blocs: An Example. Mathematics Magazine 50.1 1977 • Straffin, Philip D. Measuring Voting Power. Applications of Calculus. Vol. 3. The Mathematical Association of America 1997 • Taylor, Alan D. Mathematics and Politics – Strategy, Voting, Power and Proof. New York. Springer-Verlag 1995

  14. List all possible winning coalitions {HCNS} {HCN} {HCS} {CNS} {HNS} {HN} {HS} for a total of 7 2. Count the number of occurrences such that when a player is removed from a winning coalition, the coalition is not a winning coalitionany more. For H: 5 times C: 1 timeN: 3 times S: 3 times 12 The Banzhaf Index of Power

  15. The Business, Education, CaS Example B = 14, E = 20, CaS = 76 Education does not org. Education organizes. B E B E Business does not org.Business org. E is better off organizing when B does, however, B should not organize when E does

More Related