Garrett Hardin’s article “The Tragedy of the Commons” is widely influential but fundamentally incorrect. Hardin characterizes the commons problem as arising from the exercise of free will in a world with limited carrying capacity. Hardin’s solutions to this problem emphasize coercive policies, including traditional command-and-control environmental and natural resource regulations. In contrast, the property rights literature that preceded Hardin shows that the commons problem arises from nonexclusive-use rights. Nonexclusivity is part of a broader class of restrictions on private ownership, any of which fosters dissipative rent seeking. The property rights literature focuses on value creation rather than just the physical exhaustion of the ...
This paper revisits the debate about communal management of natural resources and brings together va...
Is tragedy due to over harvesting an inevitable consequence of the voluntary action of cooperation i...
In one way or another, all environmental and natural resource problems associated with overexploitat...
This paper critically reviews Garrett Hardin’s “The Tragedy of the Commons”. Hardin’s thesis about t...
Two decades have passed since Garrett Hardin's influential paper, "The Tragedy of the Commons," app...
More than forty years have passed since the publication of H. Scott Gordon's seminal work on co...
“Freedom in a commons brings ruin to all.” So argued ecologist Garrett Hardin in “The Tragedy of the...
In The Tragedy of the Commons, Garrett Hardin argues that those who can use a resource for free cons...
Half a century after Garrett Hardin published “The Tragedy of the Commons”1 calling for “lifeboat et...
Despite the reception of Hardin's essay on the tragedy of the commons, it was not a new concept: its...
Garrett Hardin\u27s classic description of the tragedy of the commons tells us that all environmenta...
© 2015, © 2015 Union for Radical Political Economics. This paper reflects on historical debates abou...
This Article analyses both the role of historiography in Hardin\u2019s The Tragedy of the Commons (1...
In “The tragedy of the commons”, Garrett Hardin argues that when natural resources can be openly acc...
Rules, Games and Common-Pool Resources, by Elinor Ostrom, Roy Gardner, and James Walker. Ann Arbor, ...
This paper revisits the debate about communal management of natural resources and brings together va...
Is tragedy due to over harvesting an inevitable consequence of the voluntary action of cooperation i...
In one way or another, all environmental and natural resource problems associated with overexploitat...
This paper critically reviews Garrett Hardin’s “The Tragedy of the Commons”. Hardin’s thesis about t...
Two decades have passed since Garrett Hardin's influential paper, "The Tragedy of the Commons," app...
More than forty years have passed since the publication of H. Scott Gordon's seminal work on co...
“Freedom in a commons brings ruin to all.” So argued ecologist Garrett Hardin in “The Tragedy of the...
In The Tragedy of the Commons, Garrett Hardin argues that those who can use a resource for free cons...
Half a century after Garrett Hardin published “The Tragedy of the Commons”1 calling for “lifeboat et...
Despite the reception of Hardin's essay on the tragedy of the commons, it was not a new concept: its...
Garrett Hardin\u27s classic description of the tragedy of the commons tells us that all environmenta...
© 2015, © 2015 Union for Radical Political Economics. This paper reflects on historical debates abou...
This Article analyses both the role of historiography in Hardin\u2019s The Tragedy of the Commons (1...
In “The tragedy of the commons”, Garrett Hardin argues that when natural resources can be openly acc...
Rules, Games and Common-Pool Resources, by Elinor Ostrom, Roy Gardner, and James Walker. Ann Arbor, ...
This paper revisits the debate about communal management of natural resources and brings together va...
Is tragedy due to over harvesting an inevitable consequence of the voluntary action of cooperation i...
In one way or another, all environmental and natural resource problems associated with overexploitat...