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A Mile Closer to the Stars

Hugo Award Voting

  • 2008 Hugo Final Ballot (online voting version)
  • 2008 Hugo Final Ballot (PDF)
  • 2008 Hugo Nomination List (including links to online nominees where available)
  • Printable 2008 Hugo Nomination List

Online ballot will be available shortly.

If you have a work that's been nominated for a Hugo, or a link to the work and I'll add it here.

Archival Denvention Hugo Nomination Information

About Hugo Voting

Mary Kay Kare

Voting for the Hugo Awards is conducted on a preferential (instant runoff) system. If youre unfamiliar with it, it may seem complicated, but it isnt really. When you vote, you dont vote for just one of the choices you rank the offerings in each category in order of your preference. You arent required to rank all of them, but its to your advantage to do so if you want to help influence the outcome.

The counting is a bit complicated but that only affects you in that a basic understanding of it may help you in ranking your choices. Say we have four items were voting on: A, B, C, and D. We separate the ballots into four stacks. Stack One has all those ballots that list A as their first choice. Stack Two has those that have listed B as their first choice and so on. We count how many are in each stack. If one of the choices has received the majority (half of the first-choice votes cast plus at least one more) of votes, that item is the winner. If, as often happens in elections with two or more candidates, no item choice has a majority we take up the stack that has the fewest ballots. The fewest people have chosen this item as their top choice. What we do then is redistribute those ballots based on the second choices listed on those ballots as if they were the first choice. For example, say Stack Four, those who chose D as their first choice had the fewest ballots. Wed take those ballots and put them into Stacks One, Two, or Three, depending on which was ranked as second choice. Now we have three piles. This goes on until there is a winner, i.e., someone with a majority.

When it comes time to mark your ballot and vote, think first of all of who/what you would most like to win that category. Thats your number one. Then look at all the choices you have left and choose which of those you would most like to see win. Thats your number two. And so on through the nominees in each category.

You can read more about this balloting system on Wikipedia. The results of the 2004 Hugo voting process.

For more information on the Hugo Awards, check out the WSFS Constitution, AwardWeb, Locus Magazine's Index to Science Fiction Awards, Science Fiction Awards Watch, or The Hugo Awards, a new site created and managed by the Hugo Awards Marketing Subcommittee of the WSFS Mark Protection Committee.

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