The theme of the commons has long been discussed, with a variety of meanings. The chapter addresses basic questions and approaches from an environmental sociology perspective. It first looks at the origins of the debate, marked by Hardin’s seminal article and Ostrom’s path-breaking research. Second, it deals with discussions associated with the global order and its crisis, where the notion of ‘commoning’ gains relevance. Third, it considers the new commons, as directly or indirectly related with knowledge. Fourth, it reviews the question of old and new enclosures and deals with legal scholars’ debate over the commons. The last section suggests that the human-nonhuman connection is crucial to the commons, yet it has to be considered in the c...
How can we overcome the existing political, economic, and ecological crises that humanity faces? Wit...
The commons is a theoretical formalism that is useful in understanding many diverse problems of civi...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...
The theme of the commons has long been discussed, with a variety of meanings. The chapter addresses ...
© 2016 American Journal of Economics and Sociology, Inc. Elinor Ostrom's work on the commons has con...
The "commons" has come to mean many things to many people, and the term is often used inconsistently...
The article elaborates on the current debate over the commons and its genealogy. Hardin’s formulatio...
This special issue explores the idea of commons, placing it in a theoretical but also richly empiric...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...
International audienceThis article seeks to contribute to the elaboration of an analytically solid d...
Placing today’s anti-fracking protests amongst previous social struggles in Lancashire, this paper e...
We live in the midst of one of the potentially worst social and economic crisis in the history of ca...
Today the planet faces a genuine tragedy of the unmanaged ‘commons’. For decades an open access and ...
It is striking, that so many current reactions to the failures of ostensibly self-regulating neolibe...
The key challenge for ecocriticism is ecocritique, and the key problem for ecocritique is the questi...
How can we overcome the existing political, economic, and ecological crises that humanity faces? Wit...
The commons is a theoretical formalism that is useful in understanding many diverse problems of civi...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...
The theme of the commons has long been discussed, with a variety of meanings. The chapter addresses ...
© 2016 American Journal of Economics and Sociology, Inc. Elinor Ostrom's work on the commons has con...
The "commons" has come to mean many things to many people, and the term is often used inconsistently...
The article elaborates on the current debate over the commons and its genealogy. Hardin’s formulatio...
This special issue explores the idea of commons, placing it in a theoretical but also richly empiric...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...
International audienceThis article seeks to contribute to the elaboration of an analytically solid d...
Placing today’s anti-fracking protests amongst previous social struggles in Lancashire, this paper e...
We live in the midst of one of the potentially worst social and economic crisis in the history of ca...
Today the planet faces a genuine tragedy of the unmanaged ‘commons’. For decades an open access and ...
It is striking, that so many current reactions to the failures of ostensibly self-regulating neolibe...
The key challenge for ecocriticism is ecocritique, and the key problem for ecocritique is the questi...
How can we overcome the existing political, economic, and ecological crises that humanity faces? Wit...
The commons is a theoretical formalism that is useful in understanding many diverse problems of civi...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...