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999 _c52188
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003 BR-BrENAP
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008 140109s2014 enk b 001 0 eng
020 _a9780521191012 (hardback)
020 _a9780521138338 (paperback)
040 _aBR-BrENAP
_bPt_BR
_cDLC
_erda
_dDLC
082 0 0 _a320.101
_223
090 _a4.15
_bP3227s
100 1 _aPatty, John W.
245 1 0 _aSocial choice and legitimacy :
_bthe possibilities of impossibility /
_cJohn W. Patty, Elizabeth Maggie Penn. --
260 _aNew York:
_bCambridge Press,
_c2014.
300 _aix, 208 p. ;
_c24 cm.
490 0 _aPolitical economy of institutions and decisions
504 _aInclui bibliografia e índice.
505 8 _aMachine generated contents note: Part I. The Ubiquity of Aggregation: 1. Goals and trade-offs; 2. The debates surrounding social choice; 3. Social choice defended; Part II. A Theory of Legitimate Choice: 4. Legitimacy and choice; 5. Principles and legitimate choice; 6. A social choice theory of legitimacy; 7. Theory and method; Part III. Legitimate Policy Making in Practice: 8. Legislative legitimacy and judicial review; 9. Structuring discussion; 10. Administrative legitimacy; 11. Conclusion.
_tPART 1 - THE UBIQUITY OF AGGREGATION;
_t1 - GOALS AND TRADE-OFFS
_t1.1 - Many goals, one choice;
_t1.2 - Structure of the book;
_t1.3 - Theory and method;
_t2 - THE DEBATES SURROUNDING SOCIAL CHOICE;
_t2.1 - The arrow and gibbard-satterthwaite theorems;
_t2.2 - Riker and the arbitrariness of democratic choice;
_t2.3 - Mackie's defense of democracy;
_t2.4 - Additional rebittals by democratic theory;
_t2.5 - Riker and his critics: unlikely allies?;
_t3 - SOCIAL CHOICE DEFENDED;
_t3.1 - Inputs to the aggregation problem;
_t3.2 - Unrestricted domain;
_t3.3 - Independence of irrelevant alternatives;
_t3.4 - Pareto efficiency;
_t3.5 - No dictator;
_t3.6 - Transditivity;
_tPARTE II - A THEORY OF LEGITIMATE CHOICE;
_t4 - LEGITIMACY AND CHOICE;
_t4.1 - Legitimacy of what?;
_t4.2 - The bases of legitimacy;
_t5 - PRINCIPLES AND LEGITIMATE CHOICE;
_t5.1 - Characterizing legitimacy;
_t5.2 - Legitimate decison sequences;
_t6 - A SOCIAL CHOICE THEORY OF LEGITIMACY;
_t6.1 - Existence of legitimate procedures;
_t6.2 - Characterization of legitimate procedures;
_t6.3 - Streng thened notions of legitimacy
_t6.4 - Comparing principles;
_t6.5 - Conclusion;
_t7 - THEORY AND METHOD;
_t7.1 - Disagreeing about principles;
_t7.2 - Defining the set of possible choices;
_t7.3 - Actual versus perceived decision sequences;
_tPART III - LEGITIMATE POLICY MAKING PRACTICE;
_t8 - LEGISLATIVE LEGITIMACY AND JUDICIAL REVIEW;
_t8.1 - Legislative rationality and judicial review;
_t8.2 - Rational basis review and legitimacy;
_t8.3 - Two-tiered review;
_t8.4 - Strict scrutiny and legitimacy;
_t8.5 - Linking judicial review and legitimacy;
_t9 - STRUCTURING DISCUSSION;
_t9.1 - Germaneness in the house of representatives;
_t9.2 - Single-subject provisions;
_t10 - ADMINISTRATIVE LEGITIMACY;
_t10.1 - Delegation and legitimacy;
_t10.2 - Agency explanations and avoiding nondelegation;
_t10.3 - Choosing principles: Limits on agency discretion;
_tII - CONCLUSION;
_tII.1 - Legitimacy and the inadequacy of structure;
_tII.2 - Legitimacy and making sense of aggregation.
520 _a"Governing requires choices, and hence trade-offs between conflicting goals or criteria. This book asserts that legitimate governance requires explanations for such trade-offs and then demonstrates that such explanations can always be found, though not for every possible choice. In so doing, John W. Patty and Elizabeth Maggie Penn use the tools of social choice theory to provide a new and discriminating theory of legitimacy. In contrast with both earlier critics and defenders of social choice theory, Patty and Penn argue that the classic impossibility theorems of Arrow, Gibbard, and Satterthwaite are inescapably relevant to, and indeed justify, democratic institutions. Specifically, these institutions exist to do more than simply make policy - through their procedures and proceedings, these institutions make sense of the trade-offs required when controversial policy decisions must be made"--
650 _a Legitimidade
_911982
650 0 _aPolítica
_912784
650 _a Controle Social
_912092
650 0 _aAccountability
_913130
650 _a Ciência Política
_911940
700 1 _aPenn, Elizabeth Maggie,
909 _a201806
_bVinícius Pereira
942 _cG
041 _aeng