Kendall's u (Kendall and Babington Smith, 1940) takes on values between
  min.u (minimum agreement) and 1 (maximum agreement).
  The minimum min.u equals \(-1/(m - 1)\), if \(m\) is even,
  and \(-1/m\), if \(m\) is odd, where \(m\) is the number of subjects
  (judges).
The null hypothesis in the chi-square test is that the agreement between
  judges is by chance.
It is assumed that there is an equal number of observations per pair
  and that each subject judges each pair only once.