Meritocracy Voting: Measuring the Unmeasurable
Learned societies commonly carry out selection processes to add new fellows to an existing fellowship. Criteria vary across societies but are typically based on subjective judgments concerning the merit of individuals who are nominated for fellowships. These subjective assessments may be made by exi...
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sg-smu-ink.soe_research-28412017-08-05T14:47:53Z Meritocracy Voting: Measuring the Unmeasurable PHILLIPS, Peter C. B. Learned societies commonly carry out selection processes to add new fellows to an existing fellowship. Criteria vary across societies but are typically based on subjective judgments concerning the merit of individuals who are nominated for fellowships. These subjective assessments may be made by existing fellows as they vote in elections to determine the new fellows or they may be decided by a selection committee of fellows and officers of the society who determine merit after reviewing nominations and written assessments. Human judgment inevitably plays a central role in these determinations and, notwithstanding its limitations, is usually regarded as being a necessary ingredient in making an overall assessment of qualifications for fellowship. The present article suggests a mechanism by which these merit assessments may be complemented with a quantitative rule that incorporates both subjective and objective elements. The goal of measuring merit may be elusive, but quantitative assessment rules can help to widen the effective electorate (for instance, by including the decisions of editors, the judgments of independent referees, and received opinion about research) and mitigate distortions that can arise from cluster effects, invisible college coalition voting, and inner sanctum bias. The rule considered here is designed to assist the selection process by explicitly taking into account subjective assessments of individual candidates for election as well as direct quantitative measures of quality obtained from bibliometric data. Audit methods are suggested to mitigate possible gaming effects by electors in the peer review process. The methodology has application to a wide arena of quality assessment and professional ranking exercises. Some specific issues of implementation are discussed in the context of the Econometric Society fellowship elections. 2016-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/1842 info:doi/10.1080/07474938.2014.956633 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soe_research/article/2841/viewcontent/MeritocracyVotingMeasuringUnmeasurable_2016.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Economics eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Auditing peer review Bibliometric data Election Fellowship Measurement Meritocracy Peer review Quantification Subjective assessment Voting Econometrics |
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Auditing peer review Bibliometric data Election Fellowship Measurement Meritocracy Peer review Quantification Subjective assessment Voting Econometrics PHILLIPS, Peter C. B. Meritocracy Voting: Measuring the Unmeasurable |
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Learned societies commonly carry out selection processes to add new fellows to an existing fellowship. Criteria vary across societies but are typically based on subjective judgments concerning the merit of individuals who are nominated for fellowships. These subjective assessments may be made by existing fellows as they vote in elections to determine the new fellows or they may be decided by a selection committee of fellows and officers of the society who determine merit after reviewing nominations and written assessments. Human judgment inevitably plays a central role in these determinations and, notwithstanding its limitations, is usually regarded as being a necessary ingredient in making an overall assessment of qualifications for fellowship. The present article suggests a mechanism by which these merit assessments may be complemented with a quantitative rule that incorporates both subjective and objective elements. The goal of measuring merit may be elusive, but quantitative assessment rules can help to widen the effective electorate (for instance, by including the decisions of editors, the judgments of independent referees, and received opinion about research) and mitigate distortions that can arise from cluster effects, invisible college coalition voting, and inner sanctum bias. The rule considered here is designed to assist the selection process by explicitly taking into account subjective assessments of individual candidates for election as well as direct quantitative measures of quality obtained from bibliometric data. Audit methods are suggested to mitigate possible gaming effects by electors in the peer review process. The methodology has application to a wide arena of quality assessment and professional ranking exercises. Some specific issues of implementation are discussed in the context of the Econometric Society fellowship elections. |
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text |
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PHILLIPS, Peter C. B. |
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PHILLIPS, Peter C. B. |
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PHILLIPS, Peter C. B. |
title |
Meritocracy Voting: Measuring the Unmeasurable |
title_short |
Meritocracy Voting: Measuring the Unmeasurable |
title_full |
Meritocracy Voting: Measuring the Unmeasurable |
title_fullStr |
Meritocracy Voting: Measuring the Unmeasurable |
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Meritocracy Voting: Measuring the Unmeasurable |
title_sort |
meritocracy voting: measuring the unmeasurable |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
publishDate |
2016 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/1842 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soe_research/article/2841/viewcontent/MeritocracyVotingMeasuringUnmeasurable_2016.pdf |
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