Multiple public goods and lexicographic preferences: Replacement principle
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1611764
DOI10.1016/S0304-4068(02)00002-2zbMath1012.91015OpenAlexW2060189590MaRDI QIDQ1611764
Publication date: 28 August 2002
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Economics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0304-4068(02)00002-2
Related Items (17)
Solidarity for public goods under single-peaked preferences: characterizing target set correspondences ⋮ Single-dipped preferences with satiation: strong group strategy-proofness and unanimity ⋮ Weighted majoritarian rules for the location of multiple public facilities ⋮ Random mechanism design on multidimensional domains ⋮ Multiple public goods, lexicographic preferences, and single-plateaued preference rules. ⋮ Two necessary conditions for strategy-proofness: on what domains are they also sufficient? ⋮ The replacement principle for the provision of multiple public goods on tree networks ⋮ The capacity constrained facility location problem ⋮ Strategy-proof rules for two public goods: double median rules ⋮ Efficiency and consistency for locating multiple public facilities ⋮ Priorities in the location of multiple public facilities ⋮ Solidarity in choosing a location on a cycle ⋮ Public decisions: solidarity and the status quo ⋮ ORDINAL GAMES ⋮ Strategy-proof location of public bads in an interval ⋮ Three public goods and lexicographic preferences: replacement principle ⋮ Unanimity in attribute-based preference domains
Cites Work
- The replacement principle and tree structured preferences
- Pazner-Schmeidler rules in large societies
- The replacement principle in public good economies with single-peaked preferences
- Strategy-proof allotment rules
- Stability of matchings when individuals have preferences over colleagues
- The replacement principle in economies with single-peaked preferences
- The replacement principle in economies with indivisible goods
- Welfare-domination under preference-replacement: a survey and open questions
- Locating libraries on a street
- The Pure Compensation Problem: Egalitarianism Versus Laissez-Fairism
- Independence axioms for the provision of multiple public goods as options
This page was built for publication: Multiple public goods and lexicographic preferences: Replacement principle