On Empirical Validation of Compactness Measures for Electoral Redistricting and Its Significance for Application of Models in the Social Sciences

Author:

Chou Christine1,Kimbrough Steven O.2,Murphy Frederic H.3,Sullivan-Fedock John4,Woodard C. Jason5

Affiliation:

1. Department of International Business, National Dong Hwa University, Hualien, Taiwan

2. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA

3. Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA

4. Operations and Information Management, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA

5. School of Information Systems, Singapore Management University, Singapore

Abstract

Use of optimization models in science and policy applications is often problematic because the best available models are very inaccurate representations of the originating problems. Such is the case with electoral districting models, for which there exist no generally accepted measures of compactness, in spite of many proposals and much analytical study. This article reports on an experimental investigation of subjective judgments of compactness for electoral districts. The experiment draws on a unique database of 116 distinct, legally valid districting plans for the Philadelphia City Council, discovered with evolutionary computation. Subjects in the experiment displayed, in the aggregate, remarkable agreement with several standard measures of compactness, thus providing warrant for use of these measures that has heretofore been unavailable. The exercise also lends support to the underlying methodology on display here, which proposes to use models based on subjective judgments in combination with algorithms that find multiple solutions in order to support application of optimization models in contexts in which they are only very approximate representations.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Law,Library and Information Sciences,Computer Science Applications,General Social Sciences

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