Learn About Fair Division

Fair division means dividing resources in a way that's provably fair for everyone involved. Since Hugo Steinhaus first described the “cake cutting” problem in 1944, researchers in Economics, Mathematics, and Computer Science have developed hundreds of methods for mathematically fair sharing.

Most of these methods are math theories but a few are quite useful for everyday things as well. For example, settling inheritance disputes, deciding fair rent between roommates, or splitting up chores. Some methods are even used to settle resource disputes between countries!

Should I be using these methods?

Maybe! Here are a few tools that use fair division methods:

In everyday activities, it's probably best to talk things through and reach a mutual agreement with others. Fair division methods are most suited for situations where people can't agree but we still want everyone gets a fair share.

If you are curious to learn the logic behind provably fair solutions, I've developed a fun, interactive course. You'll get to explore the famous cake cutting problem, which is the heart of the fair division field. Please check it out!

A happy cartoon cat with a slice of vanilla cake and a happy cartoon raccoon with a slice of chocolate cake

Your Turn

I've designed a visual tool for splitting divisible resources.

Visual division tool with a graph-like interface. Values are drawn for strawberry, vanilla, and chocolate. A toolbar at the top shows "Person 1", "Labels", "Add Person", and other options

Give it a try, experiment!

Split a 10-flavor cake! See if you can follow the algorithms!

The tool uses Cut and Choose for 2 people and the Selfridge-Conway Method for 3, other algorithms may be added in the future.