If Hardin’s (1968) widely cited case of a pasture accessible to everyone were the standard for public natural resources, those resources would have the tendency to be depleted, degraded, destroyed or overexploited. Hardin explains that each herdsman found it more profitable to graze more animals than the pasture could support, since each took all the profit from an extra animal but bore only a fraction of the cost of overgrazing. Yet, what Hardin calls a “Tragedy of the Commons” is rather a “Tragedy of Open Access” (Feeny et al., 1990), since Hardin confuses the characteristics of a resource, such as low excludability and high rivalry in consumption, with its property rights regime which can take diverse forms. Hardin describes an open acce...
Rangelands, fishing grounds, and forests are, in many countries around the world, regarded as common...
Research on the commons have been an inspiration for initiatives on natural resource decentralizatio...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...
In many times and in many areas, production was organized around a pool of commons— resources that w...
This paper revisits the debate about communal management of natural resources and brings together va...
The institutional and ecological structure of Hardin’s “tragedy of the commons” appears deceptively ...
Two decades have passed since Garrett Hardin's influential paper, "The Tragedy of the Commons," app...
Garett Hardin' s essay "The Tragedy of the Commons" has for almost three decades stimulated research...
The paper analyses the institutional dynamics surrounding common-pool resources in postsocialist Cen...
Common properties refers to those lands which by tradition rural communities own collectively. They ...
Hardin's Tragedy o f the Commons model predicts the eventual overexploi-tation or degradation o...
This paper revisits the debate about communal management of natural resources and brings together va...
'The paper analyses the institutional dynamics surrounding common-pool resources in post socialist C...
Garrett Hardin’s article “The Tragedy of the Commons” is widely influential but fundamentally incorr...
In “The tragedy of the commons”, Garrett Hardin argues that when natural resources can be openly acc...
Rangelands, fishing grounds, and forests are, in many countries around the world, regarded as common...
Research on the commons have been an inspiration for initiatives on natural resource decentralizatio...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...
In many times and in many areas, production was organized around a pool of commons— resources that w...
This paper revisits the debate about communal management of natural resources and brings together va...
The institutional and ecological structure of Hardin’s “tragedy of the commons” appears deceptively ...
Two decades have passed since Garrett Hardin's influential paper, "The Tragedy of the Commons," app...
Garett Hardin' s essay "The Tragedy of the Commons" has for almost three decades stimulated research...
The paper analyses the institutional dynamics surrounding common-pool resources in postsocialist Cen...
Common properties refers to those lands which by tradition rural communities own collectively. They ...
Hardin's Tragedy o f the Commons model predicts the eventual overexploi-tation or degradation o...
This paper revisits the debate about communal management of natural resources and brings together va...
'The paper analyses the institutional dynamics surrounding common-pool resources in post socialist C...
Garrett Hardin’s article “The Tragedy of the Commons” is widely influential but fundamentally incorr...
In “The tragedy of the commons”, Garrett Hardin argues that when natural resources can be openly acc...
Rangelands, fishing grounds, and forests are, in many countries around the world, regarded as common...
Research on the commons have been an inspiration for initiatives on natural resource decentralizatio...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...