In this article, we present our hypotheses regarding the divergence in the development of common-property regimes between Eastern and Western Europe. The latter area developed formalized arrangements for the collective exploitation of natural resources particularly early, and it was chosen not only by farmers, but also in the cities – by craftsmen – to deal with the economic and social problems during the late medieval and early modern times. In the East the development of such institutions for collective action started – we believe – much later, due to a number of factors. Whereas in the West population growth and urbanization occurred together with a speedy commercialization of the economy, putting pressure on natural resources and hence ...
The paper analyses the institutional dynamics surrounding common-pool resources in postsocialist Cen...
The village communities in Northern Portugal have combined a system of private property and common p...
The last contribution sums up the major results of this volume. It adopts a comparative perspective ...
In this article, we present our hypotheses regarding the divergence in the development of common-pro...
The view of the commons as archaic, ‘backward’ and ‘irrational’ institutions for the management of r...
This article explores the changing use of commons in seventeenth-century upland Scandinavia. The mai...
Although historians have long been aware of the economic significance of rural commons, Polish histo...
The paper discusses the link between commons as they might have been used in prehistoric Norway and...
Recent literature on developing countries has revived interest in structural change involving the re...
This article examines the impact of the commons on economic inequality in the eighteenth-century rur...
The aim of this book is to explain economic dualism in the history of modern Europe. The emergence o...
The aim of this book is to explain economic dualism in the history of modern Europe. The emergence o...
Framing rural commons as ‘institutions for collective action’, recent historical research has consis...
Utilising common land, especially open fields and forests, was an important part of the Bohemian vil...
Common goods are commonplace in a myriad of cultures, since antiquity to the Industrial Revolution. ...
The paper analyses the institutional dynamics surrounding common-pool resources in postsocialist Cen...
The village communities in Northern Portugal have combined a system of private property and common p...
The last contribution sums up the major results of this volume. It adopts a comparative perspective ...
In this article, we present our hypotheses regarding the divergence in the development of common-pro...
The view of the commons as archaic, ‘backward’ and ‘irrational’ institutions for the management of r...
This article explores the changing use of commons in seventeenth-century upland Scandinavia. The mai...
Although historians have long been aware of the economic significance of rural commons, Polish histo...
The paper discusses the link between commons as they might have been used in prehistoric Norway and...
Recent literature on developing countries has revived interest in structural change involving the re...
This article examines the impact of the commons on economic inequality in the eighteenth-century rur...
The aim of this book is to explain economic dualism in the history of modern Europe. The emergence o...
The aim of this book is to explain economic dualism in the history of modern Europe. The emergence o...
Framing rural commons as ‘institutions for collective action’, recent historical research has consis...
Utilising common land, especially open fields and forests, was an important part of the Bohemian vil...
Common goods are commonplace in a myriad of cultures, since antiquity to the Industrial Revolution. ...
The paper analyses the institutional dynamics surrounding common-pool resources in postsocialist Cen...
The village communities in Northern Portugal have combined a system of private property and common p...
The last contribution sums up the major results of this volume. It adopts a comparative perspective ...