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social choice and judicial decision making  

Definition

  • Social choice theory studies the differences between individual and group (or social) decision making and the implications of these differences for the structure and outputs of institutions. Social choice begins with the insight that while it is reasonable to assume as a condition of rationality that individuals hold transitive preference orderings (A preferred to B preferred to C implies that A is preferred to C), this assumption cannot be extended to groups of three or more when they are selecting among three or more options. [Source: Encyclopedia of Law & Society: American and Global Perspectives; Social Choice and Judicial Decision Making]

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https://concepts.sagepub.com/social-science/concept/social_choice_and_judicial_decision_making

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