The institutional and ecological structure of Hardin’s “tragedy of the commons” appears deceptively simple: the open-access pasture eventually will be overexploited and degraded unless (i) it is privatized, (ii) the government regulates access and use, or (iii) the users themselves impose a common-property regime to regulate their own access and use. In this paper, we argue that the institutional structure of the “Herder Problem” (as it is known to game theorists) is far more complicated than it is usually portrayed. Specifically, it is not just about the pasture. It is equally about the grass that grows on the pasture and the cattle that consume the grass. Even Elinor Ostrom — a scholar known for embracing complexity — presented an overly ...
Garett Hardin' s essay "The Tragedy of the Commons" has for almost three decades stimulated research...
To move beyond Hardin’s tragedy of the commons, it is fundamental to avoid falling into either of tw...
In Garrett Hardin’s popular essay on “The Tragedy of the Commons”, he presents a model of a shared c...
The institutional and ecological structure of Hardin’s “tragedy of the commons” appears deceptively ...
If Hardin’s (1968) widely cited case of a pasture accessible to everyone were the standard for publi...
Common property summer pastures constitute longstanding evidence that the tragedy of the commons can...
Rules, Games and Common-Pool Resources, by Elinor Ostrom, Roy Gardner, and James Walker. Ann Arbor, ...
Two decades have passed since Garrett Hardin's influential paper, "The Tragedy of the Commons," app...
Common property summer pastures constitute longstanding evidence that the tragedy of the commons can...
Garrett Hardin’s article “The Tragedy of the Commons” is widely influential but fundamentally incorr...
Is tragedy due to over harvesting an inevitable consequence of the voluntary action of cooperation i...
In the literature on the commons, open access is considered the absence of a property regime and equ...
In many times and in many areas, production was organized around a pool of commons— resources that w...
commons was originally applied to a group of herders grazing cattle on common land. Each herder only...
This Article analyses both the role of historiography in Hardin\u2019s The Tragedy of the Commons (1...
Garett Hardin' s essay "The Tragedy of the Commons" has for almost three decades stimulated research...
To move beyond Hardin’s tragedy of the commons, it is fundamental to avoid falling into either of tw...
In Garrett Hardin’s popular essay on “The Tragedy of the Commons”, he presents a model of a shared c...
The institutional and ecological structure of Hardin’s “tragedy of the commons” appears deceptively ...
If Hardin’s (1968) widely cited case of a pasture accessible to everyone were the standard for publi...
Common property summer pastures constitute longstanding evidence that the tragedy of the commons can...
Rules, Games and Common-Pool Resources, by Elinor Ostrom, Roy Gardner, and James Walker. Ann Arbor, ...
Two decades have passed since Garrett Hardin's influential paper, "The Tragedy of the Commons," app...
Common property summer pastures constitute longstanding evidence that the tragedy of the commons can...
Garrett Hardin’s article “The Tragedy of the Commons” is widely influential but fundamentally incorr...
Is tragedy due to over harvesting an inevitable consequence of the voluntary action of cooperation i...
In the literature on the commons, open access is considered the absence of a property regime and equ...
In many times and in many areas, production was organized around a pool of commons— resources that w...
commons was originally applied to a group of herders grazing cattle on common land. Each herder only...
This Article analyses both the role of historiography in Hardin\u2019s The Tragedy of the Commons (1...
Garett Hardin' s essay "The Tragedy of the Commons" has for almost three decades stimulated research...
To move beyond Hardin’s tragedy of the commons, it is fundamental to avoid falling into either of tw...
In Garrett Hardin’s popular essay on “The Tragedy of the Commons”, he presents a model of a shared c...