Ideally, we would like to require that, for every L-cohesive group, every member must have at least L representatives. This condition, called
Strong Justified Representation (SJR), might be unattainable, as shown by the following example.
Example 1. There
k=3 seats and 4 candidates {a,b,c,d}. There are
n=12 voters with approval sets: ab, b, b, bc, c, c, cd, d, d, da, a, a. Note that the Hare quota is 4. The group {ab,b,b,bc} is 1-cohesive, as it contains 1 quota and all members approve candidate b. Strong-JR implies that candidate b must be elected. Similarly, The group {bc,c c,cd} is 1-cohesive, which requires to elect candidate c. Similarly, the group {cd,d,d,da} requires to elect d, and the group {da,a,a,ab} requires to elect a. So we need to elect 4 candidates, but the committee size is only 3. Therefore, no committee satisfies strong JR. There are several ways to relax the notion of strong-JR.
Unanimous groups One way is to guarantee representation only to an
L-unanimous group, defined as a voter group with at least L quotas, who approve
exactly the same set of at least L candidates. This condition is called
Unanimous Justified Representation (UJR). However, L-unanimous groups are quite rare in approval voting systems, so Unanimous-JR would not be a very useful guarantee.
Cohesive groups Remaining with L-cohesive groups, we can relax the representation guarantee as follows. Define the
satisfaction of a voter as the number of winners approved by that voter. Strong-JR requires that, in every L-cohesive group, the
minimum satisfaction of a group member is at least L. Instead, we can require that the
average satisfaction of the group members is at least L. This weaker condition is called
Average Justified Representation (AJR) or
Average Fair Share (AFS). (note that in that paper AJR is called AFS). We can weaken the requirement further by requiring that the
maximum satisfaction of a group member is at least L. In other words, in every L-cohesive group,
at least one member must have L approved representatives. This condition is called
Extended Justified Representation (EJR); it was introduced and analyzed by Aziz, Brill, Conitzer,
Elkind, Freeman, and
Walsh. is another polynomial-time computable rule that satisfies EJR. • Another polytime algorithm that guarantees EJR is EJR-Exact. •
Sequential-PAV satisfies EJR only for 1-cohesive groups, and only for
k ≤ 5. For
k ≥ 6, it fails EJR even for 1-cohesive groups. consider a setting with 2
k candidates and
k voters. Voter
i approves candidate
i, as well as candidates
k+1,...,2
k. Note that the quota is one voter, and every
L voters are an
L-cohesive group. The committee 1,...,
k satisfies PJR, since for every
L voters, the union of their approval sets contains
L winners. But it does not satisfy EJR, since every voter has only 1 approved winner. In contrast, the committee
k+1,...,2
k satisfies EJR. • PAV satisfies EJR, so it satisfies PJR too; and it is also the only weight-based approval voting rule that satisfies PJR. However, Sequential-PAV violates PJR. • Some of
Phragmen's voting rules satisfy PJR, namely: the Leximax Phragmen - which is NP-hard to compute, and the Sequential Phragmen - which is polytime computable, and in addition, satisfies
committee monotonicity. • When
k divides
n, Monroe and Greedy Monroe satisfy PJR. However, when
k does not divide
n, both Monroe and Greedy Monroe might violate PJR, except when L=1. • It is
co-NP-complete to check whether a given committee satisfies PJR. present a different weakening of cohesivity. Given two integers L and
B≤
L, a group
S of voters is called
(L,B)-weak-cohesive if it contains at least L quotas, and there is a set
C of
L candidates, such that each member of S approves at least
B candidates of
C. Note that (
L,
L)-weak-cohesive is equivalent to L-cohesive. A committee satisfies
Full Justified Representation (FJR) if in every (L,B)-weak-cohesive group, there is at least one members who approves some B winners. Clearly, FJR implies EJR. • FJR can always be satisfied by the Greedy Cohesive Rule (which is not polytime); it is open whether there are polytime algorithms satisfying FJR. Brill and Peters present a different weakening of cohesivity. Given an elected committee, define a group as
L-deprived if it contains at least L quotas, and in addition, at least one non-elected candidate is approved by all members. A committee satisfies
EJR+ if for every L-deprived voter group, the maximum satisfaction is at least L (at least one group member approves at least L winners); a committee satisfies
PJR+ if for every L-deprived group, the union of their approval sets contains some
L winners. Clearly, EJR+ implies EJR and PJR+, and PJR+ implies PJR. • PAV, local-search-PAV and MES satisfy EJR+; the proofs are the same as the original proofs, as the original proofs do not use cohesivity - they only use the fact that one candidate approved by all group members is not elected. • There is also a polytime
greedy algorithm that finds an EJR+ committee: the Greedy Justified Candidate Rule. • PJR+ can be verified in polynomial time by reduction to
submodular optimization - in contrast to PJR which is coNP-hard to verify. • EJR+ can be verified in polynomial time by the following simple algorithm: For every L between 1 and k, and for every unelected candidate c: count the number of voters who approve c, and approve fewer than L winners. If the number of such voters is at least L quotas, then the committee violates EJR+. • EJR+ satisfies a weak form of
Committee monotonicity: for all
k, there is an EJR+ committee
W of size
k, and an unelected candidate
c, such that adding
c to
W yields an EJR+ committee (of size
k+1).
Perfect representation A different, unrelated property is
Perfect representation (PER). It means that there is a mapping of each voter to a single winner approved by him, such that each winner represents exactly
n/
k voters. While a perfect representation may not exist, we expect that, if it exists, then it will be elected by the voting rule. • PER is compatible with PJR and JR: for every instance that admits perfect representation, there exists a committee that satisfies PJR. However, PER is not compatible with EJR: there are instances in which perfect representations exist, but none of them satisfies EJR. PER is satisfied by the
Monroe rule, and by the leximax-
Phragmen's rule; but it is violated by Greedy Monroe, Sequential PAV, and PAV. See also:
Fully proportional representation. == Implications ==