A characterization of a family of rules for the adjudication of conflicting claims
W Thomson - Games and Economic Behavior, 2013 - Elsevier
We consider the problem of adjudicating conflicting claims, and characterize the family of
rules satisfying four standard invariance requirements, homogeneity, two composition
properties, and consistency. It takes as point of departure the characterization of the family of
two-claimant rules satisfying the first three requirements, and describes the restrictions
imposed by consistency on this family and the further implications of this requirement for
problems with three or more claimants. The proof, which is an alternative to Moulinʼs …
rules satisfying four standard invariance requirements, homogeneity, two composition
properties, and consistency. It takes as point of departure the characterization of the family of
two-claimant rules satisfying the first three requirements, and describes the restrictions
imposed by consistency on this family and the further implications of this requirement for
problems with three or more claimants. The proof, which is an alternative to Moulinʼs …
[BOOK][B] A characterization of a family of rules for the adjudication of conflicting claims
W Thomson - 2006 - rcer.econ.rochester.edu
We consider the problem of adjudicating conflicting claims, and characterize the family of
rules satisfying four standard invariance requirements, homogeneity, two composition
properties, and consistency. It takes as point of departure the characterization of the family of
two-claimant rules satisfying the first three requirements, and describes the restrictions
imposed by consistency on this family and the further implications of this requirement for
problems with three or more claimants. The proof, which is an alternative to Moulin's original …
rules satisfying four standard invariance requirements, homogeneity, two composition
properties, and consistency. It takes as point of departure the characterization of the family of
two-claimant rules satisfying the first three requirements, and describes the restrictions
imposed by consistency on this family and the further implications of this requirement for
problems with three or more claimants. The proof, which is an alternative to Moulin's original …
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