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Chapter Fourteen - The Informational Basis of Social Choiceprotect

In: Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare

Author

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  • Sen, Amartya

Abstract

Any procedure of social choice makes use of some types of information and ignores others. For example, the method of majority decision concentrates on people's votes, but pays no direct attention to, say, their social standings, or their prosperity or penury, or even the intensities of their preferences. The differences between distinct procedures lie, to a substantial extent, on the kind of information that each procedure uses and what it has to ignore. The informational bases of the different social choice procedures tell us a great deal about how they respectively work and what they can or cannot achieve.

Suggested Citation

  • Sen, Amartya, 2011. "Chapter Fourteen - The Informational Basis of Social Choiceprotect," Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare, in: K. J. Arrow & A. K. Sen & K. Suzumura (ed.), Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare, edition 1, volume 2, chapter 14, pages 29-46, Elsevier.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:socchp:2-14
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Miguel Niño‐Zarazúa, 2019. "Welfare and Redistributive Effects of Social Assistance in the Global South," Population and Development Review, The Population Council, Inc., vol. 45(S1), pages 3-22, December.
    2. Marko Ledić & Ivica Rubil, 2021. "Beyond Wage Gap, Towards Job Quality Gap: The Role of Inter-Group Differences in Wages, Non-Wage Job Dimensions, and Preferences," Social Indicators Research: An International and Interdisciplinary Journal for Quality-of-Life Measurement, Springer, vol. 155(2), pages 523-561, June.

    More about this item

    Keywords

    information; welfarism; voting; social welfare; impossibility theorems;
    All these keywords.

    JEL classification:

    • I0 - Health, Education, and Welfare - - General

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