by Heather Rose Jones
(This is a serialized article exploring the history of the Best Related Work Hugo category in its various names and versions. If you’ve come in at the middle, start here.)
Contents
Part 2: Methodology
2.3 Data and Eligibility
2.3.1 Data Sources and Available Data
2.3.2 Eligibility Notes
Part 2: Methodology
Data Sources
This section documents the sources of the data used, the types of data available, and any administrative requirements that affected that availability, concluding with a discussion of how the available data determines the types of comparisons that will be made across the several identifiable “eras” of the award category.
Lists of Best Related Work nominees were taken from the official Hugo Award website (www.thehugoawards.org) and documents linked there. The documents at the Hugo Awards website are generally copies (either electronic or scanned) of reports released after the awards ceremony. Other than reports of Finalists and Winners, reports of this type may not have been created prior to the administrative requirement for reporting the Long List, and the type of data included on these reports is variable. The most complete possible data would be:
After the application of the E Pluribus Hugo nomination processing system, the report also shows the calculation data that produces the “score” for determining Finalists.
From this, each work was then researched online to confirm the correct and complete title, author(s), and publication date, as well as to assign tags for the Media type and subject matter Categories of the work.[1] It is also noted if a nominee is part of an ongoing Series of some type, or is a repeat nominee with different content. Whenever possible, a URL link has been identified for reference purposes.[2]
The basic accuracy of the official Hugo Award website is assumed with regard to the nominee lists. Additional details including full titles and full credits have been researched in Wikipedia and archive.org, as well as sites relevant to the individual works.
A reasonable effort has been made to identify the gender of all authors and subjects, as reflected in public information. (See the section on Categorization Process in the chapter on Gender for details of this process.)
Ideally, individuals would also be tagged for nationality, ethnicity, or other identity factors, however as these cannot be consistently determined from publicly available data, the results would not be statistically meaningful.
History of the Administrative Reporting Requirements
While Finalist data is available for all years, the availability of additional nominee data is affected by changes in the reporting requirements for this data. In 1980 (Worldcon 38, Noreascon Two), when the Best Related category first appeared, it is coincidental that a new amendment appears in the business meeting minutes[3] requiring reporting of the final voting data (presumably rather than a simple report of the results). There is no reference to nomination data in this proposal and the existing constitution did not require reporting of extended nomination data. The requirement to report final voting data was ratified in 1981 (Worldcon 39, Denvention Two) and made part of the WSFS constitution.[4] The present study focuses on nomination data rather than the final voting process, therefore the voting data is not relevant here.
The 1994 (Worldcon 52, ConAdian) business meeting minutes[5] include the following proposed amendment affecting the available nomination data.
Release of Hugo Nomination Totals
MOVED, to add the following to the end of Section 2.9.4 of the WSFS Constitution: During the same period the nomination voting totals shall also be published, including in each category the vote counts for at least the 15 highest vote-getters and any other candidates receiving a number of votes equal to at least 5% of the nomination ballots cast in that category.
(submitted by Mark L. Olson, Rick Katze, Anthony Lewis, and Sharon Sbarsky)
(The rules now require the publication of the final-ballot Hugo voting counts. (It is not presently required that nomination totals be released, though it has become customary for Worldcons to release them.)[6] This motion would require that the nomination counts also be published, including runners-up down to 15th place or 5%, whichever represents fewer votes.)
After some debate regarding whether this requirement should be a resolution or an amendment, the original amendment passed its initial vote. The amendment was ratified at the 1995 (Worldcon 53, Intersection) business meeting.[7]
This requirement was therefore in place officially starting in 1996. Data consistent with this requirement is available at HugoAwards.org for 1996, not for 1997, then consistently thereafter starting in 1998.[8] Note that in years when data is available for both the total number of nominating ballots for Best Related and the number of nominations received by the 15th place nominee, the 15th place work always received fewer nominations than 5% of the total nominating ballots in the category, therefore it should never have been the case that additional nominees were listed below 15th place because they were on at least 5% of the nominating ballots. Additional nominees are sometimes listed, but not for this reason.
The approved version of the nominee reporting requirement is documented in the archived 1999 version of the WSFS constitution[9] which has the following text. (No archived business meeting documents are available for 1998.)
3.11.4: The complete numerical vote totals, including all preliminary tallies for first, second, ... places, shall be made public by the Worldcon Committee within ninety (90) days after the Worldcon. During the same period the nomination voting totals shall also be published, including in each category the vote counts for at least the fifteen highest vote-getters and any other candidate receiving a number of votes equal to at least five percent (5%) of the nomination ballots cast in that category.
The next change to relevant reporting requirements was proposed in the 2007 business meeting.[10] This involved some sort of change to the Long List of nominees, but the specific text is not included in the minutes that year. The amendment passed and was ratified in 2008 Worldcon 66, Denvention 3)[11] as follows (new text is underlined), becoming effective in 2009:
Moved, To amend section 3.11.4 of the Constitution by adding the following words to the end of Section 3.11.4: During the same period the nomination voting totals shall also be published, including in each category the vote counts for at least the fifteen highest vote-getters and any other candidate receiving a number of votes equal to at least five percent (5%) of the nomination ballots cast in that category, but not including any candidate receiving fewer than five (5) votes.[12]
For years when the full Long List nomination statistics are available, there appear to be only 2 years when the “not less than 5” rule would need to have been invoked. In 1998 (before the requirement of “at least 5 votes”), there was a tie for 11-14th place with 4 votes each and, as noted previously, the 15th ranked nominee (which presumably was a tie for items with 3 votes) was not listed. In 2007, the year the 5-vote restriction was first proposed, there was a tie for 15-19th place with 4 votes each.
Note that in 2007 a far more extensive Long List than usual was published. For Best Related, the list included every item receiving at least 2 votes. (Other categories reporting extended nominee lists that year had different minimums.) The data reporting for this year was unusual in other ways, in that it did not include nomination data for total ballots, ballots for each category, or distinct works in each category, which data had been fairly standard in the previous decade. This means it’s not possible to calculate how the more extensive Long List relates to the 5%-of-category cut-off.[13] The business meeting would have occurred prior to the nominee data being published, though the data reports were almost certainly prepared earlier. It seems likely that the extended nominee lists were related in some way to the debate over reporting requirements, but in that case, the omission of the category totals is baffling.
In 2009, the first year the revised reporting requirements were effective, there was also an unusually extensive Long List reported. All categories reported every nominee that received 5 or more nominations. For Best Related, this included works down to 25th place, which had 6 nominations.[14] The 5% cut-off that year would be 13 nominations. It isn’t clear whether this was a deliberate choice to publish non-required data using only the “at least 5 nominations” rule or whether it was a misreading of the requirements of the new rule.[15]
Changes to the nomination process under E Pluribus Hugo[16] affected data reporting primarily in that it functionally eliminated ties during the evaluation of nominees.[17] As noted previously, the two changes to the nomination process (6 rather than 5 Finalists and use of EPH) combined with the reporting requirements for nominees appears to have been generally interpreted as “Finalists plus 10 runners up,” i.e., a total of 16 works, however the occasional year reporting 15 items on the Long List may be following the letter of the requirement to report the top 15 items.
Timeline of the Available Data and the Effects of Reporting Requirements
Overall, here is the timeline of reporting requirements and actual available data, as it relates to the changes in the category name/scope. (The requirement for at least 5 votes isn’t included as it had no statutory effect on the data.)
Reporting is more erratic for the total number of Hugo nominating ballots, the number of ballots including each specific category, and the number of distinct works nominated in each category. It isn’t clear that any of this data is required to be reported. The incompleteness of this data will be relevant when tracking certain trends in nomination data.[19]
Due to certain coincidences of timing regarding changes to the category and changes to reporting practices, we can conveniently group the data into the following comparison sets.
Best Non-Fiction Book
Best Related Book
Best Related Work
Comparison Sets
Therefore, the analysis will include the following:
Eligibility Questions
Works that make the nomination cut-off for Finalist are evaluated to confirm that they meet eligibility requirements for release date, format, categorization, etc. Some aspects of this evaluation are clear-cut while others can be subjective. Works on the Long List that don’t make the Finalist cut-off are not necessarily evaluated for eligibility, although in some cases there are notes indicating a Long List work would not be eligible. Therefore, the two data sets (Finalists and cumulative Long List) answer slightly different questions. Finalist data tells us what eligible works have been nominated, but Long List data can tell us what the nominators think should be eligible, or perhaps what their impression of the category’s scope is without reference to the eligibility rules.
When a clearly ineligible work appears on the Long List, it could be a sign that nominators aren’t studying the eligibility requirements carefully, or that they are unaware of key information (such as publication date), but it could also indicate that nominators think the work should be recognized in some way regardless of whether it fits the eligibility requirements at the time.[20] This last motivation would be difficult to identify in the absence of documented discussions on the topic. Given that ambiguous works (especially during the Related Work era), when such discussions are well-documented, can show a conscious interest in exploring and stretching the boundaries of the category’s scope, it’s probably best to assume similar motivations in cases where the motivations aren’t well documented. For example, when works of Fiction or Fiction collections are nominated, it should be presumed that nominators considered the work to be significant for some other aspect. It can’t entirely be ruled out that there may have been organized bad-faith campaigns to nominate works that the nominators knew to be out of scope, yet nominated anyway. But this study gives the benefit of the doubt, given the regular appearance of clearly ambiguous works.
Eligibility in Multiple Years
That said, there are contexts in which apparent eligibility concerns can be explained. Works are sometimes nominated in more than one year, or in a different year than the year of creation, due to the allowance for extended eligibility or circumstances which allowed renewed eligibility.
If a new edition of a Book was published, the new edition might be nominated as a substantially new work. This is the case for the following works:
Some works seem to appear twice based on a short version of the title, but on further examination this is due to different volumes of a multi-volume work being nominated.
During the Related Work era, certain ongoing projects have been nominated in multiple years based on continually changing content, essentially functioning as a new edition. This is the case for the following works:
The question of whether the Archive of Our Own site was sufficiently different from year to year for re-nomination was discussed within the fannish community and raised some interesting philosophical issues. The fact that the site only made Finalist once, and then was not re-nominated after it won that year, has contributed to leaving these issues unresolved. The Event and Podcast nominees can more clearly be considered discrete works in different years. There have been other ongoing projects that could raise the same questions, such as The Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction website, where the lack of multiple appearances has made the question moot.
Extended Eligibility
When a specific work is nominated in a year other than its official year of eligibility, it is typically the following year, either based on extended eligibility or possibly a mistaken assumption that eligibility would be extended. Eligibility may be extended if a work had limited availability in its release year, or specifically had limited availability to English-speaking readers in the USA.
While it’s common for Dramatic Presentations to have petitions for extended eligibility[21] it’s far less common for other types of works. Fictional works originally published in non-English languages have a different allowance for the year of first publication in English, due to the Anglocentric nature of the Worldcon nominators. Similarly, due to the USA-centric nature of the Worldcon nominators, there is an allowance to renew eligibility in the first year of USA publication for works originally published outside the USA.
The following shows the timeline that can explain dual appearances in adjacent years due to extension:
One exception to these allowances is that if a work was a Finalist in a previous year, it cannot receive extended eligibility regardless of other considerations.[23]
Extension of eligibility may be documented in the Business Meeting minutes (if voted on) or may be determined by the Hugo administrators and documented in the Hugo voting report (if procedural), but this latter isn’t always explicitly stated. In some cases, no written documentation for an apparent extension could be identified.
One work was nominated early (i.e., nominated in the same year as creation rather than nominated in the following year) as well as being nominated in its eligible year.
A somewhat unusual case is a work nominated in translation after its original publication date, but as the original publication was English/USA, the translation did not get extended eligibility.
The following works appear as nominees in the year after the eligible year (i.e., 2 years after publication) and there is specific documentation that eligibility was extended.
The following works appear as nominees for the year after the eligible year (i.e., 2 years after publication) and may have been given extended eligibility but there is no documentation to that effect.[25]
Extended eligibility is not always documented even when it appears to have been granted. However, in some cases a lack of extended eligibility is specifically documented, as for the following.
Extended eligibility is excluded if a work has been a Finalist in its official year of eligibility. That’s the situation for the following, though the notes on ineligibility do not mention the prior Finalist status.
It is much rarer for a work to be nominated later than the year after official eligibility, however the following item appears in the data set.
Other Disqualifiations
There are several other reasons why nominated works might be disqualified. The following additional works have disqualification reasons listed.
Eligibility and the Data Analysis
Voluntary withdrawals have not been counted as disqualification and are not reported specifically as they do not speak to nomination patterns and the reason for withdrawal may not be known.
All works included in the nomination reports are included in the topical data analysis for Long List and full data sets, regardless of eligibility rulings or withdrawals, as they speak to patterns of nomination and the nominators’ intent.
(Segment V will cover Part 2 Methodology, Section 2.4 Categorization Process.)
[1]. Personal note: All coding regarding format, genre/nature, and subject are from my own analysis and any errors or misinterpretations are my responsibility.
[2]. Permanence of the links cannot be guaranteed. In order of priority, links refer to the work itself (in the case of online publications), a listing for the work by the author or publisher, a copy of the work at archive.org, or a listing for the work at a reference site such as Wikipedia, Goodreads, or The Internet Speculative Fiction Database (isfdb.org).
[3]. See: https://www.wsfs.org/rules-of-the-world-science-fiction-society/archive-of-wsfs-rules/wsfs-rules-as-of-worldcon-38-1980/ accessed 2025/08/25.
[4]. See: https://www.wsfs.org/rules-of-the-world-science-fiction-society/archive-of-wsfs-rules/wsfs-rules-as-of-worldcon-39-1981/, accessed 2025/08/25.
[5]. See: https://www.wsfs.org/rules-of-the-world-science-fiction-society/archive-of-wsfs-rules/wsfs-rules-as-of-worldcon-52-1994/, accessed 2025/08/25.
[6]. It isn’t clear from the materials at the HugoAward.org website that this was actually the case, unless the nomination data was being released but was not available to the compilers of the website. For Best Related, prior to 1994, non-Finalist nomination data is only available on the website for 1980 and 1989.
[7]. See: https://www.wsfs.org/rules-of-the-world-science-fiction-society/archive-of-wsfs-rules/wsfs-rules-as-of-worldcon-53-1995/, accessed 2025/08/25.
[8]. The 1998 data lists only 14 nominees, however #14 received 4 nominations. It is possible that the rule was interpreted in a way that excluded the next tier (items receiving 3 nominations) due to exceeding 15 items, but this is entirely speculation. In general, ties for 15th place result in listing all tied items.
[9]. See: https://www.wsfs.org/rules-of-the-world-science-fiction-society/archive-of-wsfs-rules/wsfs-rules-as-of-worldcon-57-1999/; accessed 2025/06/19.
[10]. See: https://www.wsfs.org/rules-of-the-world-science-fiction-society/archive-of-wsfs-rules/wsfs-rules-as-of-worldcon-65-2007/; accessed 2025/08/26.
[11]. See: https://www.wsfs.org/rules-of-the-world-science-fiction-society/archive-... accessed 2025/06/19.
[12]. Commentary in the meeting minutes indicates that reporting nominees with fewer than 5 nominations is not forbidden but is not mandatory.
[13]. The 5% cutoff in the several years before and after 2007 ran around 8-13 nominations, therefore it is highly unlikely that the extended list was based on a 5% rule.
[14]. Possibly no work had exactly 5 nominations.
[15]. For anyone wanting to study typical nomination distribution patterns, the 2007 and 2009 data sets provide a wealth of data beyond the typical.
[16]. See the Administrative History section under Changes to the Nomination Process.
[17]. It’s still theoretically possible to have a tie between works at any stage in the process, but mathematically it is far less likely to happen due to the nature of the calculations.
[18]. As a result of all these exceptions, in the 12 years of this group, only 2 years reported exactly 15 Long List nominees.
[19]. See the section on Historic Trends under Basic Nomination Data.
[20] The non-trivial number of nominations required to make the Long List means that presence on that list indicates more than an individual nominator oversight or error.
[21]. This is particularly relevant due to the rationale behind limited release of some works just before the end of the year.
[22]. Note that the timing requires that a request for extension be submitted at a time when full nomination statistics are not yet released.
[23]. The requirement for business meeting approval also functions as a gate for evaluating whether a work has had fair consideration. There was a case where an extended eligibility request for a Dramatic Presentation (Godzilla Minus One) had been approved, but then after the full nomination statistics were available and it was observed that the work had come very close to making the Finalist list, the decision was reversed on the basis that clearly it had been fairly considered in its first year.
[24]. This example points out the biases inherent in the procedural extension allowances. In 2023, a substantial proportion of the nominating body were Chinese nationals, due to the location of Worldcon that year, and might not have had access to the prior English-language publication. There is an argument to be made for updating such allowances based on an increasingly more international Worldcon membership, and this is a topic under community discussion.
[25] For works that were not Finalists, it’s possible that no evaluation was made for extended eligibility.
[26]. An online search for Challcrest Press Books does not turn up any other titles associated with this press, suggesting it may have been a self-publishing imprint for this one work.
[27] The stimulus for this delayed nomination in 2007 appears to have been re-publication of the book in a deluxe signed and numbered edition from Traife Buffet in 2006. (See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jay_Lake)