Delegations as Adaptive Representation Patterns: Rethinking Influence in Liquid Democracy
Davide Grossi, Andreas Nitsche

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel model for analyzing influence in liquid democracy, highlighting how transitivity can regulate power and emphasizing the importance of its adaptive nature for democratic processes.
Contribution
It presents a new approach to measure influence in liquid democracy, considering the process dynamics and the adaptive, evolving nature of delegation structures.
Findings
Transitivity can help regulate influence in liquid democracy.
Influence from transitivity declines exponentially with increased delegation.
Adaptive analysis of liquid democracy is a promising research direction.
Abstract
Liquid democracy is a mechanism for the division of labor in decision-making through the transitive delegation of influence. In essence, all individuals possess the autonomy to determine the issues with which they will engage directly, while for other matters, they may appoint a representative of their choosing. So far, the literature has studied the delegation structures emerging in liquid democracy as static. As a result, transitivity defined as the capacity to transfer acquired authority to another entity, has been identified as a concern as it would be conducive to unrestrained accumulation of power. Focusing on the implementation of liquid democracy supported by the LiquidFeedback software, we propose a novel approach to assessing the influence of voting nodes in a transitive delegation graph, taking into account the process nature of real-world liquid democracy in which…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSocial Media and Politics · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence · University-Industry-Government Innovation Models
