In the literature on the commons, open access is considered the absence of a property regime and equated with a tragedy of the commons. However, a longitudinal study of mobile pastoralists in the Far North Region of Cameroon shows that open access is not the absence of rules and does not lead to a tragedy of the commons. Current theoretical models cannot explain this phenomenon of management of common-pool grazing resources in a situation of open access. Here I propose a new property regime – an open property regime – that solves this paradox. First, I will explain how open property regimes function as complex adaptive systems using our study of mobile pastoralists in Cameroon. Second, I will describe four other cases of pastoral systems wi...
The general distinctions between open access, state property, common proerty and private property ar...
If Hardin’s (1968) widely cited case of a pasture accessible to everyone were the standard for publi...
Why are highways, city streets, and sidewalks in almost all cases, in all market economies, managed ...
Current theoretical models of the commons assert that common-pool resources can only be managed sust...
According to conventional law-and-economics theory, private property rights tend to evolve as resour...
This paper sets to show the contribution of common property resources (CPRs) to the welfare of commu...
The theory that land holding is inexorably evolving from common to private or state tenure is challe...
Property rights theory has contributed a great deal to global understanding of the factors shaping t...
Let me begin this article on surprising commons with a few words about another article that I wrot...
This article, inter alia, attempts to highlight some major concepts and theories on property and the...
The institutional and ecological structure of Hardin’s “tragedy of the commons” appears deceptively ...
In many times and in many areas, production was organized around a pool of commons— resources that w...
We examine the efficiency, distributional, and environmental consequences of assigning spatial prope...
The paper reports on a series of field experiments based on a non-standard common-pool resource mode...
Property rights theory has contributed a great deal to global understanding of the factors shaping t...
The general distinctions between open access, state property, common proerty and private property ar...
If Hardin’s (1968) widely cited case of a pasture accessible to everyone were the standard for publi...
Why are highways, city streets, and sidewalks in almost all cases, in all market economies, managed ...
Current theoretical models of the commons assert that common-pool resources can only be managed sust...
According to conventional law-and-economics theory, private property rights tend to evolve as resour...
This paper sets to show the contribution of common property resources (CPRs) to the welfare of commu...
The theory that land holding is inexorably evolving from common to private or state tenure is challe...
Property rights theory has contributed a great deal to global understanding of the factors shaping t...
Let me begin this article on surprising commons with a few words about another article that I wrot...
This article, inter alia, attempts to highlight some major concepts and theories on property and the...
The institutional and ecological structure of Hardin’s “tragedy of the commons” appears deceptively ...
In many times and in many areas, production was organized around a pool of commons— resources that w...
We examine the efficiency, distributional, and environmental consequences of assigning spatial prope...
The paper reports on a series of field experiments based on a non-standard common-pool resource mode...
Property rights theory has contributed a great deal to global understanding of the factors shaping t...
The general distinctions between open access, state property, common proerty and private property ar...
If Hardin’s (1968) widely cited case of a pasture accessible to everyone were the standard for publi...
Why are highways, city streets, and sidewalks in almost all cases, in all market economies, managed ...