Why are many storefronts in Moscow empty while street kiosks in front are full of goods? This article develops a theory of anticommons property to help explain the puzzle of empty storefronts and full kiosks. Anticommons property can be understood as the mirror image of commons property. By definition, in a commons, multiple owners are each endowed with the privilege to use a given resource, and no one has the right to exclude another. When too many owners have such privileges of use, the resource is prone to overuse -- a tragedy of the commons. In an anticommons, by my definition, multiple owners are each endowed with the fight to exclude others from a scarce resource, and no one has an effective privilege of use. When there are too ...
The advantages of privatized property regimes and common property regimes have been debated in legal...
Property rights have long been associated with a simple and distinctive technology: exclusion. But t...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...
Why are many storefronts in Moscow empty while street kiosks in front are full of goods? This articl...
Under socialism, governments stifled markets and often left store shelves bare. One promise of trans...
This article gives a concise introduction to the ‘tragedy of the anticommons.’ The anticommons thesi...
Garrett Hardin\u27s classic description of the tragedy of the commons tells us that all environmenta...
In recent years, theorists interested in the commons have increasingly broadened their gaze to take ...
This two-volume collection brings together the most important articles on the tragedies of the commo...
The right to exclude others has often been cited as the most important characteristic of private pro...
ALMOST under our eyes a system of property is in the making. It emerges as all such usages do out of...
A semicommons regime exists when the efficient use of a resource requires the co-existence of both c...
In organizations, conflict often revolves around commons resources because they are critical for inf...
This chapter aims to set the theoretical framework for this collection by challenging the establishe...
The means by which property organizes human behavior and social life is the subject of profound and ...
The advantages of privatized property regimes and common property regimes have been debated in legal...
Property rights have long been associated with a simple and distinctive technology: exclusion. But t...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...
Why are many storefronts in Moscow empty while street kiosks in front are full of goods? This articl...
Under socialism, governments stifled markets and often left store shelves bare. One promise of trans...
This article gives a concise introduction to the ‘tragedy of the anticommons.’ The anticommons thesi...
Garrett Hardin\u27s classic description of the tragedy of the commons tells us that all environmenta...
In recent years, theorists interested in the commons have increasingly broadened their gaze to take ...
This two-volume collection brings together the most important articles on the tragedies of the commo...
The right to exclude others has often been cited as the most important characteristic of private pro...
ALMOST under our eyes a system of property is in the making. It emerges as all such usages do out of...
A semicommons regime exists when the efficient use of a resource requires the co-existence of both c...
In organizations, conflict often revolves around commons resources because they are critical for inf...
This chapter aims to set the theoretical framework for this collection by challenging the establishe...
The means by which property organizes human behavior and social life is the subject of profound and ...
The advantages of privatized property regimes and common property regimes have been debated in legal...
Property rights have long been associated with a simple and distinctive technology: exclusion. But t...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...