Black's method is an election method proposed by Duncan Black in 1958 as a compromise between the Condorcet method and the Borda count. This method selects a Condorcet winner. If a Condorcet winner does not exist, then the candidate with the highest Borda score is selected. Among methods satisfying the majority criterion, Black's method gives the minimum power to the majority and hence the method is best at protecting minorities. Black's method satisfies the following criteria: Unrestricted domain Non-imposition (a.k.a. citizen sovereignty) Non-dictatorship Homogeneity Condorcet criterion Majority criterion Pareto criterion (a.k.a. unanimity) Monotonicity criterion Majority loser criterion Condorcet loser criterion Reversal symmetry Resolvability criterion Polynomial time Black's method does not satisfy the following criteria: Mutual majority criterion Smith criterion Participation Consistency Independence of Smith-dominated alternatives Independence of clones Independence of irrelevant alternatives Peyton Young's criterion Local independence of irrelevant alternatives.
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