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Michel Balinski

Michel Louis Balinski (born Michał Ludwik Baliński; October 6, 1933 – February 4, 2019) was an applied mathematician, economist, operations research analyst and political scientist. As a Polish-American, educated in the United States, he lived and worked primarily in the United States and France. He was known for his work in optimisation (combinatorial, linear, nonlinear), convex polyhedra, stable matching, and the theory and practice of electoral systems, jury decision, and social choice. He was Directeur de Recherche de classe exceptionnelle (emeritus) of the C.N.R.S. at the École Polytechnique (Paris). He was awarded the John von Neumann Theory Prize by INFORMS in 2013.[2]

Michel Louis Balinski
Michał Ludwik Baliński
From left: Michel Balinski, Friedrich Pukelsheim [de], Steven Brams, Oberwolfach 2004
Born(1933-10-06)October 6, 1933
Geneva, Switzerland
DiedFebruary 4, 2019 (aged 85)
Bayonne, France
NationalityPolish
Alma materWilliams College, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Princeton University
Known forBalinski's theorem
ChildrenMarta Balińska b. 1965 - known for the biography of Ludwik Rajchman
AwardsJohn von Neumann Theory Prize, Lanchester Prize
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics, economics, operations research, political science
InstitutionsÉcole Polytechnique, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Princeton University, Cornell University[1]
Doctoral advisorAlbert W. Tucker
Doctoral studentsLouis Billera

Michel Louis Balinski died in Bayonne, France. He maintained an active involvement in research and public appearances, his last public engagement took place in January 2019.[3]

Early life

Michel Balinski was born in Geneva, Switzerland, the grandson of the Polish bacteriologist and founder of UNICEF, Ludwik Rajchman.[4] Brought up by his mother Irena (Rajchman) Balinska and his grandparents, they were living in France when the Nazis invaded in 1940. They fled via Spain and Portugal to the United States. He graduated from the Edgewood School in Greenwich CT in 1950, earned a B.A. degree cum laude in mathematics at Williams College in 1954 and a M.Sc. in economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1956. He completed a Ph.D. in mathematics at Princeton University in 1959 under the supervision of Albert W. Tucker.[4][5]

Career

After completing his Ph.D. Balinski remained at Princeton University as a research associate then lecturer in mathematics. From 1963 to 1965 he was associate professor of economics at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He was then appointed to the Graduate School of the City University of New York, first as associate professor then (as of 1969) professor of mathematics. One of his doctoral students at the City University was another noted mathematician, Louis Billera, through whom he has many academic descendants. In 1978 he was appointed professor of organization and management and of administrative sciences at Yale.

In parallel with his academic work, Balinski engaged in consulting as of the time he was a graduate student at Princeton. A participant in the beginnings of what became the consulting firm Mathematica, he was a senior consultant with the firm from 1962 to 1974. He also acted as a consultant elsewhere, including the Rand Corporation, Mobil Oil Research, the ORTF (Office de Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française), the Mayor's office of the City of New York (as member of the Operations Research Council), and Econ, Inc. From 1975 to 1977 he was chairman of System and Decision Sciences at IIASA (International Institute for Applied Systems Analyses) at Laxenburg, Austria.

In 1980 Balinski settled in France, becoming Directeur de Recherche de classe exceptionnelle of the CNRS (Centre National de Recherche Scientifique) at the Laboratoire d’Econométrie of the Ecole Polytechnique in 1983. Concurrently he was Leading Professor of Applied Mathematics and Statistics and of Economics at Stony Brook University (1983–1990), where he founded and was the first Director of the Institute for Decision Sciences (that has since become the Center for Game Theory in Economics).

Upon becoming director of the Laboratoire d’Econométrie (1989 to 1999), he co-founded and co-directed the joint Ecole Polytechnique/Université de Paris 1 masters program "Modélisation et méthodes mathématiques en économie: optimisation et analyse stratégiques," and its successor the joint Ecole Polytechnique/Université Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris 6) masters program "Optimisation, jeux et modélisation en économie."[6]

He was a visiting professor at other institutions, including the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (1972–1973), the Université Scientifique et Médicale de Grenoble (1974–1975), the Universidad de Chile in Santiago (1994), and INSEAD in Fontainebleau (1997–1998).[4][6]

Balinski was the founding editor-in-chief of the journal Mathematical Programming in 1971, one of the founders of the Mathematical Optimization Society in 1970, and president of that society from 1986 to 1989.[7]

Research contributions

Balinski's Ph.D. thesis concerned the vertex enumeration problem, the algorithmic problem of listing all vertices of a convex polytope or finding all optimal solutions of a linear program, and some of his subsequent work continued to concern polyhedral combinatorics. The thesis includes the fundamental theorem, published in 1961, that the skeletons of polytopes in "n"-space viewed as graphs are "n"-connected, meaning that at least "n" edges must be removed to disconnect the graph of the remaining vertices and edges;[8] it is known as Balinski's theorem. He also proved the Hirsch conjecture for several different classes of polytopes associated with the transportation problem, showed that the diameter of the skeleton of the assignment polytope viewed as a graph is 2, and found the polytope whose vertices are the stable matchings of the university admissions problem.

His contributions to linear and nonlinear optimization include a primal/dual simplex method that incorporates a natural proof of termination and leads to a self-contained, elementary but rigorous, constructive account of the theory and the basic computational tool of linear programming; the use and economic interpretation of dual prices; and a proof that prices in von Neumann's model of an expanding economy are marginal values. His work in integer programming includes the formulation and analysis of the fixed cost transportation problem; one of the first computationally successful practical uses of Gomory's cutting plane algorithm (1968, truck deliveries with cost functions in part concave, in part convex); and an extensive survey paper on integer programming which was awarded INFORM's Lanchester Prize in 1965.

Together with Mourad Baïou,[9] he developed a new formulation of stable matchings and generalizations in terms of graphs, providing a unified notation and tool leading to new proofs of known results and new results; notably, a characterization of the university admissions polytope, and a generalization of matching opposites (e.g., men and women, students and universities) to matching opposites in real numbers (e.g., time spent together).

In 1970, he published one of the earliest papers on the closure problem and its applications to transportation planning.[10]

Electoral systems

Balinski has made important contributions to the theory of electoral systems, namely, representation and apportionment on the one hand, and voting on the other. His 1982 book[11][12] with H. Peyton Young[13] has had direct practical application in apportioning the seats of assemblies to regions in several countries (including the UK). He conceived and developed with others "biproportional apportionment" that has been adopted (as of 2014) in five of Switzerland's cantonal elections. His 2010 book with Rida Laraki[14] proposes a new theory and method of voting called "majority judgment" where voters evaluate the merit of each candidate in a well-defined ordinal scale (instead of voting for one or several candidates, or rank-ordering them) and majorities determine society's evaluation of each candidate and thereby its rank-ordering of them all. This, they prove, overcomes the most important drawbacks of the traditional theory of voting (including Arrow's impossibility theorem).[15]

Awards and honors

Phi Beta Kappa, Williams College 1954; Frederick W. Lanchester Prize, INFORMS 1965;[16] I.B.M. World Trade Corporation Fellow 1969–1970; Lester R. Ford Award, Mathematical Association of America 1976;[17] Honorary Master of Arts, Privatum, Yale University 1978; Special Service Award, Mathematical Optimization Society, 1982; Honorary Doctorate (Ehrendoktors, Mathematisch-Naturwissenshaftlichen) Universität Augsburg, 2004;[4] Murat Sertel Lecturer (inaugural lecture), 8th International Meeting of the Society for Social Choice and Welfare, Istanbul, July 2006; Messenger Lecturer, Cornell University, September 2007;[18][19][20] IFORS Distinguished Lecturer, INFORMS National Meeting, Washington, D.C., October 2008;[21] George H. Hallet Award, 2009;[22] Lester R. Ford Award, Mathematical Association of America, 2009;[23] Celebration of Michel Balinski's 78 years at the 23rd International Conference on Game Theory, SUNY Stony Brook, July 2012;[24] John von Neumann Theory Prize, INFORMS, 2013;[16] INFORMS Fellow, 2014.[15][25]

Selected publications

Books

  • Fair Representation: Meeting the Ideal of One Man, One Vote, Michel L. Balinski and H. Peyton Young, Yale University Press, 1982. 2nd edition, Brookings Institution Press, Washington, D.C., 2001. Japanese translation, Chikura-Shobo Publishing Co., Tokyo, 1987. ISBN 9780815716341. [Given the George H. Hallet Award, 2009, "[For] a book published at least 10 years ago that has made a lasting contribution to ... representation and electoral systems."]
  • Le Suffrage Universel Inachevé, Michel Balinski, Editions Belin, 2004, ISBN 2-7011-3774-8.
  • Majority Judgment: Measuring, Ranking, and Electing, Michel Balinski and Rida Laraki, MIT Press,[26] 2010, ISBN 9780262015134.

Articles

  • Balinski, M. L. (1961), "An algorithm for finding all vertices of convex polyhedral sets", J. Soc. Indust. Appl. Math., 9: 72–88, doi:10.1137/0109008, MR 0142057.
  • —— (1961), "On the graph structure of convex polyhedra in n-space", Pacific Journal of Mathematics, 11 (2): 431–434, doi:10.2140/pjm.1961.11.431.
  • —— (1965), "Integer Programming : Methods, Uses, Computation", Management Science, 12 (3): 253–313, doi:10.1287/mnsc.12.3.253, JSTOR 2627582. Reprinted in Mathematics of the Decision Sciences (1968), in Proceedings of the Princeton Symposium on Mathematical Programming, 1970, and in 50 Years of Integer Programming 1958–2008 (2010). Given the 1965 Lanchester Prize
  • ——; Baumol, W. J. (1968). "The dual in nonlinear programming and its economic interpretation". The Review of Economic Studies. 25 (3): 237–256. doi:10.2307/2296660. JSTOR 2296660.
  • ——; Tucker, A. W. (1968). "Duality theory of linear programs: a constructive approach with applications". SIAM Review. 11: 247–377.
  • —— (1970), "On a selection problem", Management Science, 17 (3): 230–231, doi:10.1287/mnsc.17.3.230.
  • ——; Young, H. P. (1974). "Interpreting von Neumann model prices as marginal values". Journal of Economic Theory. 9 (4): 449–463. doi:10.1016/0022-0531(74)90045-3.
  • ——; Young, H. P. (1975). "The quota method of apportionment" (PDF). Amer. Math. Monthly. 82 (7): 701–730. doi:10.2307/2318729. JSTOR 2318729.. Given the 1976 Lester R. Ford Award
  • —— (1984). "The Hirsch conjecture for dual transportation polyhedra" (PDF). Mathematics of Operations Research. 9 (4): 629–633. doi:10.1287/moor.9.4.629.
  • ——; Demange, G. (1989). "An axiomatic approach to proportionality between matrices" (PDF). Mathematics of Operations Research. 14 (4): 700–719. doi:10.1287/moor.14.4.700.
  • ——; Ramiréz, V. (1996). "A case study of electoral manipulation: the Mexican laws of 1989 and 1994". Electoral Studies. 15 (2): 203–217. doi:10.1016/0261-3794(95)00033-x.
  • ——; Sönmez, T. (1999). "A tale of two mechanisms: student placement". Journal of Economic Theory. 84: 73–94. doi:10.1006/jeth.1998.2469.
  • Baïou, M.; Balinski, M. L. (2002). "The stable allocation (or ordinal transportation) problem". Mathematics of Operations Research. 27: 662–680. doi:10.1287/moor.27.4.662.302.
  • Balinski, M. L. (2005), "What is just?", American Mathematical Monthly, 112 (6): 502–5011, doi:10.2307/30037520, JSTOR 30037520.
  • ——; Laraki, R. (2007). "A theory of measuring, electing and ranking". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 104 (21): 8720–8725. Bibcode:2007PNAS..104.8720B. doi:10.1073/pnas.0702634104. PMC 1885569. PMID 17496140.
  • Balinski, M. L. (2008), "Fair majority voting (or how to eliminate gerrymandering)", American Mathematical Monthly, 115 (2): 97–113, doi:10.1080/00029890.2008.11920503, JSTOR 27642416, S2CID 1139441.Given the Lester R. Ford Award
  • —— (2009), "Projets électoraux: le droit rencontre les mathématiques", Recueil Dalloz, 3: 183–186.
  • ——; Laraki, R. (2014). "Judge: Don't Vote". Operations Research. 62 (3): 483–511. doi:10.1287/opre.2014.1269.

References

  1. ^ [1], pi.math.cornell.edu;
  2. ^ "International Conference on Mathematical Optimization for Fair Social Decisions : A tribute to Michel Balinski". Science Conf. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
  3. ^ INFORMS. "Balinski, Michel". INFORMS. Retrieved 2019-04-14.
  4. ^ a b c d Laudatio, Friedrich Pukelsheim, University of Augsburg, retrieved 2013-11-27.
  5. ^ Michel Louis Balinski at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  6. ^ a b Michel Balinski receives the 2013 John von Neumann Theory Prize 2013-12-03 at the Wayback Machine, École Polytechnique, retrieved 2013-11-27.
  7. ^ Wolfe, Philip, The Mathematical Programming Society (PDF), Mathematical Optimization Society, retrieved 2013-11-27.
  8. ^ Ziegler, Günter M. (1995), "Section 3.5: Balinski's Theorem: The Graph is d-Connected", Lectures on Polytopes, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 152, Springer-Verlag.
  9. ^ . fc.isima.fr. Archived from the original on 2017-02-06.
  10. ^ Hochbaum, Dorit (2004), "50th Anniversary Article: Selection, Provisioning, Shared Fixed Costs, Maximum Closure, and Implications on Algorithmic Methods Today", Management Science, 50 (6): 709–723, doi:10.1287/mnsc.1040.0242.
  11. ^ Apportionment: Balinski and Young's contribution--- http://www.ams.org/samplings/feature-column/fcarc-apportionii3
  12. ^ Donald L. Vestal, Fair Representation: Meeting the Ideal of One Man, One Vote --- http://www.maa.org/press/maa-reviews/fair-representation-meeting-the-ideal-of-one-man-one-vote
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-06-20. Retrieved 2017-02-05.
  14. ^ "Rida Laraki homepage".
  15. ^ a b INFORMS award recipients: Michel L. Balinski, retrieved 2013-11-27.
  16. ^ a b "Michel L Balinski".
  17. ^ Balinski, Michel L.; Young, H. P. (1975). "The quota method of apportionment" (PDF). Amer. Math. Monthly. 82 (7): 701–730. doi:10.2307/2318729. JSTOR 2318729.
  18. ^ . www.math.cornell.edu. Archived from the original on 2008-05-11.
  19. ^ . www.math.cornell.edu. Archived from the original on 2008-08-21.
  20. ^ http://www.orie.cornell.edu/news/index.cfm?news_id=62115&news_back=news_archive%26[dead link]
  21. ^ "Michel Balinski".
  22. ^ "Josep Colomer's Blog".
  23. ^ Balinski, Michel (2008). "Fair Majority Voting (or How to Eliminate Gerrymandering)". Amer. Math. Monthly. 115 (2): 97–113. doi:10.1080/00029890.2008.11920503. JSTOR 27642416. S2CID 1139441.
  24. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-02-05. Retrieved 2017-02-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  25. ^ "INFORMS Fellows: Class of 2014".
  26. ^ Majority Judgment | the MIT Press. MIT Press. 28 January 2011. ISBN 9780262015134.

External links

  • Biography of Michel Balinski from the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences
  • Ludwik Rajchman – Grandfather of Michel Balinski, Founder of UNICEF
  • Michel Balinski's website
  • Messenger Lectures
  • Messenger Lectures
  • Apportionment: Balinski and Young’s Contribution
  • Political calculus
  • Le jugement majoritaire, video
  • Majority Judgment: Measuring, Ranking and Electing
  • A Biography of Michel Balinski in the book: A Mathematical View of Our World.
  • IFORS Distinguished Lecture
  • George H. Hallet Award 2009
  • Remembering Michel Balinski
  • In Memoriam: Michel Balinski (1933-2019)

michel, balinski, michel, louis, balinski, born, michał, ludwik, baliński, october, 1933, february, 2019, applied, mathematician, economist, operations, research, analyst, political, scientist, polish, american, educated, united, states, lived, worked, primari. Michel Louis Balinski born Michal Ludwik Balinski October 6 1933 February 4 2019 was an applied mathematician economist operations research analyst and political scientist As a Polish American educated in the United States he lived and worked primarily in the United States and France He was known for his work in optimisation combinatorial linear nonlinear convex polyhedra stable matching and the theory and practice of electoral systems jury decision and social choice He was Directeur de Recherche de classe exceptionnelle emeritus of the C N R S at the Ecole Polytechnique Paris He was awarded the John von Neumann Theory Prize by INFORMS in 2013 2 Michel Louis BalinskiMichal Ludwik BalinskiFrom left Michel Balinski Friedrich Pukelsheim de Steven Brams Oberwolfach 2004Born 1933 10 06 October 6 1933Geneva SwitzerlandDiedFebruary 4 2019 aged 85 Bayonne FranceNationalityPolishAlma materWilliams College Massachusetts Institute of Technology Princeton UniversityKnown forBalinski s theoremChildrenMarta Balinska b 1965 known for the biography of Ludwik RajchmanAwardsJohn von Neumann Theory Prize Lanchester PrizeScientific careerFieldsMathematics economics operations research political scienceInstitutionsEcole Polytechnique Massachusetts Institute of Technology Princeton University Cornell University 1 Doctoral advisorAlbert W TuckerDoctoral studentsLouis BilleraMichel Louis Balinski died in Bayonne France He maintained an active involvement in research and public appearances his last public engagement took place in January 2019 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Research contributions 3 1 Electoral systems 4 Awards and honors 5 Selected publications 5 1 Books 5 2 Articles 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditMichel Balinski was born in Geneva Switzerland the grandson of the Polish bacteriologist and founder of UNICEF Ludwik Rajchman 4 Brought up by his mother Irena Rajchman Balinska and his grandparents they were living in France when the Nazis invaded in 1940 They fled via Spain and Portugal to the United States He graduated from the Edgewood School in Greenwich CT in 1950 earned a B A degree cum laude in mathematics at Williams College in 1954 and a M Sc in economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1956 He completed a Ph D in mathematics at Princeton University in 1959 under the supervision of Albert W Tucker 4 5 Career EditAfter completing his Ph D Balinski remained at Princeton University as a research associate then lecturer in mathematics From 1963 to 1965 he was associate professor of economics at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania He was then appointed to the Graduate School of the City University of New York first as associate professor then as of 1969 professor of mathematics One of his doctoral students at the City University was another noted mathematician Louis Billera through whom he has many academic descendants In 1978 he was appointed professor of organization and management and of administrative sciences at Yale In parallel with his academic work Balinski engaged in consulting as of the time he was a graduate student at Princeton A participant in the beginnings of what became the consulting firm Mathematica he was a senior consultant with the firm from 1962 to 1974 He also acted as a consultant elsewhere including the Rand Corporation Mobil Oil Research the ORTF Office de Radiodiffusion Television Francaise the Mayor s office of the City of New York as member of the Operations Research Council and Econ Inc From 1975 to 1977 he was chairman of System and Decision Sciences at IIASA International Institute for Applied Systems Analyses at Laxenburg Austria In 1980 Balinski settled in France becoming Directeur de Recherche de classe exceptionnelle of the CNRS Centre National de Recherche Scientifique at the Laboratoire d Econometrie of the Ecole Polytechnique in 1983 Concurrently he was Leading Professor of Applied Mathematics and Statistics and of Economics at Stony Brook University 1983 1990 where he founded and was the first Director of the Institute for Decision Sciences that has since become the Center for Game Theory in Economics Upon becoming director of the Laboratoire d Econometrie 1989 to 1999 he co founded and co directed the joint Ecole Polytechnique Universite de Paris 1 masters program Modelisation et methodes mathematiques en economie optimisation et analyse strategiques and its successor the joint Ecole Polytechnique Universite Pierre et Marie Curie Paris 6 masters program Optimisation jeux et modelisation en economie 6 He was a visiting professor at other institutions including the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne 1972 1973 the Universite Scientifique et Medicale de Grenoble 1974 1975 the Universidad de Chile in Santiago 1994 and INSEAD in Fontainebleau 1997 1998 4 6 Balinski was the founding editor in chief of the journal Mathematical Programming in 1971 one of the founders of the Mathematical Optimization Society in 1970 and president of that society from 1986 to 1989 7 Research contributions EditBalinski s Ph D thesis concerned the vertex enumeration problem the algorithmic problem of listing all vertices of a convex polytope or finding all optimal solutions of a linear program and some of his subsequent work continued to concern polyhedral combinatorics The thesis includes the fundamental theorem published in 1961 that the skeletons of polytopes in n space viewed as graphs are n connected meaning that at least n edges must be removed to disconnect the graph of the remaining vertices and edges 8 it is known as Balinski s theorem He also proved the Hirsch conjecture for several different classes of polytopes associated with the transportation problem showed that the diameter of the skeleton of the assignment polytope viewed as a graph is 2 and found the polytope whose vertices are the stable matchings of the university admissions problem His contributions to linear and nonlinear optimization include a primal dual simplex method that incorporates a natural proof of termination and leads to a self contained elementary but rigorous constructive account of the theory and the basic computational tool of linear programming the use and economic interpretation of dual prices and a proof that prices in von Neumann s model of an expanding economy are marginal values His work in integer programming includes the formulation and analysis of the fixed cost transportation problem one of the first computationally successful practical uses of Gomory s cutting plane algorithm 1968 truck deliveries with cost functions in part concave in part convex and an extensive survey paper on integer programming which was awarded INFORM s Lanchester Prize in 1965 Together with Mourad Baiou 9 he developed a new formulation of stable matchings and generalizations in terms of graphs providing a unified notation and tool leading to new proofs of known results and new results notably a characterization of the university admissions polytope and a generalization of matching opposites e g men and women students and universities to matching opposites in real numbers e g time spent together In 1970 he published one of the earliest papers on the closure problem and its applications to transportation planning 10 Electoral systems Edit Balinski has made important contributions to the theory of electoral systems namely representation and apportionment on the one hand and voting on the other His 1982 book 11 12 with H Peyton Young 13 has had direct practical application in apportioning the seats of assemblies to regions in several countries including the UK He conceived and developed with others biproportional apportionment that has been adopted as of 2014 in five of Switzerland s cantonal elections His 2010 book with Rida Laraki 14 proposes a new theory and method of voting called majority judgment where voters evaluate the merit of each candidate in a well defined ordinal scale instead of voting for one or several candidates or rank ordering them and majorities determine society s evaluation of each candidate and thereby its rank ordering of them all This they prove overcomes the most important drawbacks of the traditional theory of voting including Arrow s impossibility theorem 15 Awards and honors EditPhi Beta Kappa Williams College 1954 Frederick W Lanchester Prize INFORMS 1965 16 I B M World Trade Corporation Fellow 1969 1970 Lester R Ford Award Mathematical Association of America 1976 17 Honorary Master of Arts Privatum Yale University 1978 Special Service Award Mathematical Optimization Society 1982 Honorary Doctorate Ehrendoktors Mathematisch Naturwissenshaftlichen Universitat Augsburg 2004 4 Murat Sertel Lecturer inaugural lecture 8th International Meeting of the Society for Social Choice and Welfare Istanbul July 2006 Messenger Lecturer Cornell University September 2007 18 19 20 IFORS Distinguished Lecturer INFORMS National Meeting Washington D C October 2008 21 George H Hallet Award 2009 22 Lester R Ford Award Mathematical Association of America 2009 23 Celebration of Michel Balinski s 78 years at the 23rd International Conference on Game Theory SUNY Stony Brook July 2012 24 John von Neumann Theory Prize INFORMS 2013 16 INFORMS Fellow 2014 15 25 Selected publications EditBooks Edit Fair Representation Meeting the Ideal of One Man One Vote Michel L Balinski and H Peyton Young Yale University Press 1982 2nd edition Brookings Institution Press Washington D C 2001 Japanese translation Chikura Shobo Publishing Co Tokyo 1987 ISBN 9780815716341 Given the George H Hallet Award 2009 For a book published at least 10 years ago that has made a lasting contribution to representation and electoral systems Le Suffrage Universel Inacheve Michel Balinski Editions Belin 2004 ISBN 2 7011 3774 8 Majority Judgment Measuring Ranking and Electing Michel Balinski and Rida Laraki MIT Press 26 2010 ISBN 9780262015134 Articles Edit Balinski M L 1961 An algorithm for finding all vertices of convex polyhedral sets J Soc Indust Appl Math 9 72 88 doi 10 1137 0109008 MR 0142057 1961 On the graph structure of convex polyhedra in n space Pacific Journal of Mathematics 11 2 431 434 doi 10 2140 pjm 1961 11 431 1965 Integer Programming Methods Uses Computation Management Science 12 3 253 313 doi 10 1287 mnsc 12 3 253 JSTOR 2627582 Reprinted in Mathematics of the Decision Sciences 1968 in Proceedings of the Princeton Symposium on Mathematical Programming 1970 and in 50 Years of Integer Programming 1958 2008 2010 Given the 1965 Lanchester Prize Baumol W J 1968 The dual in nonlinear programming and its economic interpretation The Review of Economic Studies 25 3 237 256 doi 10 2307 2296660 JSTOR 2296660 Tucker A W 1968 Duality theory of linear programs a constructive approach with applications SIAM Review 11 247 377 1970 On a selection problem Management Science 17 3 230 231 doi 10 1287 mnsc 17 3 230 Young H P 1974 Interpreting von Neumann model prices as marginal values Journal of Economic Theory 9 4 449 463 doi 10 1016 0022 0531 74 90045 3 Young H P 1975 The quota method of apportionment PDF Amer Math Monthly 82 7 701 730 doi 10 2307 2318729 JSTOR 2318729 Given the 1976 Lester R Ford Award 1984 The Hirsch conjecture for dual transportation polyhedra PDF Mathematics of Operations Research 9 4 629 633 doi 10 1287 moor 9 4 629 Demange G 1989 An axiomatic approach to proportionality between matrices PDF Mathematics of Operations Research 14 4 700 719 doi 10 1287 moor 14 4 700 Ramirez V 1996 A case study of electoral manipulation the Mexican laws of 1989 and 1994 Electoral Studies 15 2 203 217 doi 10 1016 0261 3794 95 00033 x Sonmez T 1999 A tale of two mechanisms student placement Journal of Economic Theory 84 73 94 doi 10 1006 jeth 1998 2469 Baiou M Balinski M L 2002 The stable allocation or ordinal transportation problem Mathematics of Operations Research 27 662 680 doi 10 1287 moor 27 4 662 302 Balinski M L 2005 What is just American Mathematical Monthly 112 6 502 5011 doi 10 2307 30037520 JSTOR 30037520 Laraki R 2007 A theory of measuring electing and ranking Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104 21 8720 8725 Bibcode 2007PNAS 104 8720B doi 10 1073 pnas 0702634104 PMC 1885569 PMID 17496140 Balinski M L 2008 Fair majority voting or how to eliminate gerrymandering American Mathematical Monthly 115 2 97 113 doi 10 1080 00029890 2008 11920503 JSTOR 27642416 S2CID 1139441 Given the Lester R Ford Award 2009 Projets electoraux le droit rencontre les mathematiques Recueil Dalloz 3 183 186 Laraki R 2014 Judge Don t Vote Operations Research 62 3 483 511 doi 10 1287 opre 2014 1269 References Edit 1 pi math cornell edu International Conference on Mathematical Optimization for Fair Social Decisions A tribute to Michel Balinski Science Conf Retrieved 12 January 2021 INFORMS Balinski Michel INFORMS Retrieved 2019 04 14 a b c d Laudatio Friedrich Pukelsheim University of Augsburg retrieved 2013 11 27 Michel Louis Balinski at the Mathematics Genealogy Project a b Michel Balinski receives the 2013 John von Neumann Theory Prize Archived 2013 12 03 at the Wayback Machine Ecole Polytechnique retrieved 2013 11 27 Wolfe Philip The Mathematical Programming Society PDF Mathematical Optimization Society retrieved 2013 11 27 Ziegler Gunter M 1995 Section 3 5 Balinski s Theorem The Graph is d Connected Lectures on Polytopes Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 152 Springer Verlag Mourad Baiou Main Home Page fc isima fr Archived from the original on 2017 02 06 Hochbaum Dorit 2004 50th Anniversary Article Selection Provisioning Shared Fixed Costs Maximum Closure and Implications on Algorithmic Methods Today Management Science 50 6 709 723 doi 10 1287 mnsc 1040 0242 Apportionment Balinski and Young s contribution http www ams org samplings feature column fcarc apportionii3 Donald L Vestal Fair Representation Meeting the Ideal of One Man One Vote http www maa org press maa reviews fair representation meeting the ideal of one man one vote H Peyton Young Academic Profile Archived from the original on 2016 06 20 Retrieved 2017 02 05 Rida Laraki homepage a b INFORMS award recipients Michel L Balinski retrieved 2013 11 27 a b Michel L Balinski Balinski Michel L Young H P 1975 The quota method of apportionment PDF Amer Math Monthly 82 7 701 730 doi 10 2307 2318729 JSTOR 2318729 Messenger Lectures www math cornell edu Archived from the original on 2008 05 11 Representing Electing and Ranking www math cornell edu Archived from the original on 2008 08 21 http www orie cornell edu news index cfm news id 62115 amp news back news archive 26 dead link Michel Balinski Josep Colomer s Blog Balinski Michel 2008 Fair Majority Voting or How to Eliminate Gerrymandering Amer Math Monthly 115 2 97 113 doi 10 1080 00029890 2008 11920503 JSTOR 27642416 S2CID 1139441 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 02 05 Retrieved 2017 02 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link INFORMS Fellows Class of 2014 Majority Judgment the MIT Press MIT Press 28 January 2011 ISBN 9780262015134 External links EditBiography of Michel Balinski from the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences Ludwik Rajchman Grandfather of Michel Balinski Founder of UNICEF Michel Balinski s website Messenger Lectures Messenger Lectures Apportionment Balinski and Young s Contribution Political calculus Le jugement majoritaire video Majority Judgment Measuring Ranking and Electing A Biography of Michel Balinski in the book A Mathematical View of Our World IFORS Distinguished Lecture George H Hallet Award 2009 Remembering Michel Balinski In Memoriam Michel Balinski 1933 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Michel Balinski amp oldid 1139778544, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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