Copyright
Martin J. OsbornePublished On
2025-09-12ISBN
Paperback978-1-80511-706-3
Hardback978-1-80511-707-0
PDF978-1-80511-708-7
Language
- English
Print Length
552 pages (xvii+534)Dimensions
Paperback203 x 38 x 254 mm(7.99" x 1.5" x 10")
Hardback203 x 41 x 254 mm(7.99" x 1.61" x 10")
Weight
Paperback1465g (51.68oz)
Hardback1715g (60.49oz)
OCLC Number
1537554285LCCN
2025474131THEMA
- JPQB
- JPHV
- JPH
- KCA
- GPQ
BISAC
- POL023000
- POL016000
- POL024000
- POL003000
- SOC024000
- MAT011000
LCC
- JA72
Keywords
- Political economy
- Formal models
- Game theory
- Collective choice
- Voting theory
- Electoral competition
Models in Political Economy
Collective Choice, Voting, Elections, Bargaining, and Rebellion
This volume explores topics that lie at the core of political economy: collective choice, voting, elections, bargaining, and rebellion. It presents the main formal models used to study the behavior of individuals and groups in political contexts, from choosing public policies and participating as voters and candidates in elections, to staging revolutions. Complete mathematical proofs are provided, to clarify the assumptions and deepen understanding.
Part I presents models of collective choice. The main question is whether methods exist for selecting a reasonable compromise when individuals’ preferences differ. Models of voting are studied in Part II. Included are models in which the individuals differ in their preferences as well as ones in which they differ in their information. One chapter considers the implications of individuals having ethical concerns, and another studies a model of sequential voting. Models of electoral competition, under the assumption of various motivations for the candidates, are discussed in Part III. One chapter is devoted to the application of these models to the study of redistributive policy. The book concludes with Part IV, which covers models of bargaining and rebellion.
The book offers a rigorous yet accessible foundation for understanding how formal tools can illuminate political phenomena.
Contents
1. Collective choice with known preferences
(pp. 3–70)- Martin J. Osborne
- Martin J. Osborne
3. Voting with two alternatives
(pp. 91–118)- Martin J. Osborne
4. Voting with many alternatives: plurality rule
(pp. 119–142)- Martin J. Osborne
5. Sequential pairwise voting
(pp. 143–174)- Martin J. Osborne
6. Ethical voting and expressive voting
(pp. 175–182)- Martin J. Osborne
7. Voting with asymmetric information
(pp. 183–218)- Martin J. Osborne
8. Electoral competition: two office-motivated candidates
(pp. 221–268)- Martin J. Osborne
9. Electoral competition: two policy-motivated candidates
(pp. 269–300)- Martin J. Osborne
10. Electoral competition: endogenous candidates
(pp. 301–338)- Martin J. Osborne
11. Distributive politics
(pp. 339–372)- Martin J. Osborne
12. Money in electoral competition
(pp. 373–396)- Martin J. Osborne
- Martin J. Osborne
14. Bargaining
(pp. 421–452)- Martin J. Osborne
15. Regime change
(pp. 453–482)- Martin J. Osborne
16. Preferences, profiles, games, and optimization
(pp. 485–512)- Martin J. Osborne
Contributors
Martin J. Osborne
(author)Professor Emeritus of Economics at University of Toronto