Political uses The Borda count is used for certain political elections in
Slovenia and was used in the
Micronesian nation of
Kiribati before 2002. A
similar rule is used in
Nauru. In Slovenia, the Borda count is used to elect two of the ninety members of the National Assembly: one member represents a constituency of ethnic Italians, the other a constituency of the Hungarian minority. Members of the Parliament of Nauru are elected based on a variant of the Borda count that involves two departures from the normal practice: • multi-seat constituencies, of either two or four seats • a point-allocation formula that involves increasingly small fractions of points for each ranking, rather than whole points. In Kiribati, the president (or
Beretitenti) is elected by the plurality system, but (prior to 2002) a variant of the Borda count was used to select either three or four candidates to stand in the election. The constituency consisted of members of the legislature (
Maneaba). Voters in the legislature ranked only four candidates, with all other candidates receiving zero points. Since at least 1991, tactical voting had been an important feature of the nominating process. The
Republic of Nauru became independent from
Australia in 1968. Before independence, and for three years afterwards, Nauru used instant-runoff voting, importing the system from Australia, but since 1971, a variant of the Borda count has been used. The modified Borda count has been used by the
Green Party of Ireland to elect its chairperson. The Borda count has been used for non-governmental purposes at certain peace conferences in Northern Ireland, where it has been used to help achieve consensus between participants including members of
Sinn Féin, the
Ulster Unionists, and the political wing of the
UDA.
Other uses The Borda count is used in elections by some educational institutions in the United States: •
University of Michigan • Central Student Government • Student Government of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts (LSASG) •
University of Missouri: officers of the Graduate-Professional Council •
University of California Los Angeles: officers of the Graduate Student Association •
Harvard University: members of the Undergraduate Council, as of 2018 •
Southern Illinois University at
Carbondale: officers of the Faculty Senate, •
Arizona State University: officers of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics assembly. •
Wheaton College, Massachusetts: faculty members of committees. •
College of William and Mary: members of the faculty personnel committee of the School of Business Administration (tie-breaker). The Borda count is used in elections by some professional and technical societies: •
International Society for Cryobiology: Board of Governors. •
U.S. Wheat and Barley Scab Initiative: members of Research Area Committees. •
X.Org Foundation: Board of Directors. The
OpenGL Architecture Review Board uses the Borda count as one of the feature-selection methods. The Borda count is used to determine winners for the
World Champion of Public Speaking contest organized by
Toastmasters International. Judges offer a ranking of their top three speakers, awarding them three points, two points, and one point, respectively. All unranked candidates receive zero points. The modified Borda count is used to elect the President for the United States member committee of
AIESEC. The
Eurovision Song Contest uses a heavily modified form of the Borda count, with a different distribution of points: only the top ten entries are considered in each ballot, the favorite entry receiving 12 points, the second-placed entry receiving 10 points, and the other eight entries getting points from 8 to 1. Although designed to favor a clear winner, it has produced very close races and even a tie. The Borda count is used for wine trophy judging by the
Australian Society of Viticulture and Oenology, and by the
RoboCup autonomous robot soccer competition at the Center for Computing Technologies, in the
University of Bremen in
Germany. The Finnish Associations Act lists three different modifications of the Borda count for holding a proportional election. All the modifications use fractions, as in Nauru. A Finnish association may choose to use other methods of election, as well.
Sports awards The Borda count is a popular method for granting sports awards. American uses include: •
MLB Most Valuable Player Award (baseball) •
Heisman Trophy (college football) • Ranking of
NCAA college teams, including in the
AP Poll and
Coaches Poll In information retrieval The Borda count has been proposed as a rank aggregation method in
information retrieval, in which documents are
ranked according to multiple criteria and the resulting rankings are then combined into a composite ranking. In this method, the ranking criteria are treated as voters, and the aggregate ranking is the result of applying the Borda count to their "ballots".
Analogy with sporting tournaments Sporting tournaments frequently seek to produce a ranking of competitors from pairwise matches, in each of which a single point is awarded for a win, half a point for a draw, and no points for a loss. (Sometimes the scores are doubled as 2/1/0.) This is analogous to a Borda count in which each preference expressed by a single voter between two candidates is equivalent to a sporting fixture; it is also analogous to
Copeland's method supposing that the electorate's overall preference between two candidates takes the place of a sporting fixture. This scoring system was adopted for international chess around the middle of the nineteenth century and by the
English Football League in 1888–1889. ==History==