Democratic fair allocation of indivisible goods

We study the problem of fairly allocating indivisible goods to groups of agents. Agents in the same group share the same set of goods even though they may have different preferences. Previous work has focused on unanimous fairness, in which all agents in each group must agree that their group's...

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Main Authors: Segal-Halevi, E, Suksompong, W
Format: Journal article
Published: Elsevier 2019
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author Segal-Halevi, E
Suksompong, W
author_facet Segal-Halevi, E
Suksompong, W
author_sort Segal-Halevi, E
collection OXFORD
description We study the problem of fairly allocating indivisible goods to groups of agents. Agents in the same group share the same set of goods even though they may have different preferences. Previous work has focused on unanimous fairness, in which all agents in each group must agree that their group's share is fair. Under this strict requirement, fair allocations exist only for small groups. We introduce the concept of democratic fairness, which aims to satisfy a certain fraction of the agents in each group. This concept is better suited to large groups such as cities or countries. We present protocols for democratic fair allocation among two or more arbitrarily large groups of agents with monotonic, additive, or binary valuations. For two groups with arbitrary monotonic valuations, we give an efficient protocol that guarantees envy-freeness up to one good for at least 1/2 of the agents in each group, and prove that the 1/2 fraction is optimal. We also present other protocols that make weaker fairness guarantees to more agents in each group, or to more groups. Our protocols combine techniques from different fields, including combinatorial game theory, cake cutting, and voting.
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spelling oxford-uuid:08faac47-03f4-4798-a7bd-c5ddc8cbda922022-03-26T09:15:51ZDemocratic fair allocation of indivisible goodsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:08faac47-03f4-4798-a7bd-c5ddc8cbda92Symplectic Elements at OxfordElsevier2019Segal-Halevi, ESuksompong, WWe study the problem of fairly allocating indivisible goods to groups of agents. Agents in the same group share the same set of goods even though they may have different preferences. Previous work has focused on unanimous fairness, in which all agents in each group must agree that their group's share is fair. Under this strict requirement, fair allocations exist only for small groups. We introduce the concept of democratic fairness, which aims to satisfy a certain fraction of the agents in each group. This concept is better suited to large groups such as cities or countries. We present protocols for democratic fair allocation among two or more arbitrarily large groups of agents with monotonic, additive, or binary valuations. For two groups with arbitrary monotonic valuations, we give an efficient protocol that guarantees envy-freeness up to one good for at least 1/2 of the agents in each group, and prove that the 1/2 fraction is optimal. We also present other protocols that make weaker fairness guarantees to more agents in each group, or to more groups. Our protocols combine techniques from different fields, including combinatorial game theory, cake cutting, and voting.
spellingShingle Segal-Halevi, E
Suksompong, W
Democratic fair allocation of indivisible goods
title Democratic fair allocation of indivisible goods
title_full Democratic fair allocation of indivisible goods
title_fullStr Democratic fair allocation of indivisible goods
title_full_unstemmed Democratic fair allocation of indivisible goods
title_short Democratic fair allocation of indivisible goods
title_sort democratic fair allocation of indivisible goods
work_keys_str_mv AT segalhalevie democraticfairallocationofindivisiblegoods
AT suksompongw democraticfairallocationofindivisiblegoods