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Land use hub > Land governance, rights & tenure >
Contents below:
· General information
· Periodicals
· Institutions
~ International organizations
~ NGOs
· Social-ecological systems (SES)
· Metacoupling & telecoupling
· Select commentary on Garret Hardin's "Tragedy of the Commons"
Also see:
~ provides some information on genetic resources, which some consider
a “global commons.”
General information, ideas & approaches
Digital Library of the Commons @ IASC
ejolt [Environmental Justice Organizations, Liabilities and Trade]
· Commons
Introduction to Common Pool Resource Theory
· Compiled by Dr. Rebecca L. Gruby with input from commons scholars, September 2020
· "A new collection of 73 essays that describe the enormous potential of the commons in
conceptualizing and building a better future...."
Periodicals
International Journal of the Commons
· “...an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed open-access journal…dedicated to furthering the understanding of
institutions for use and management of resources that are (or could be) enjoyed collectively.”
Institutions ~ International organizations
Global Environment Facility (GEF)
Institutions ~ NGOs
International Association for the Study of the Commons (IASC)
· "...devoted to bringing together multi-disciplinary researchers, practitioners and policymakers for the
purpose of improving governance and management, advancing understanding, and creating sustainable
solutions for commons, common-pool resources, or any other form of shared resource."
· "a commons movement strategy center founded in 2001"
Social-ecological systems (SES)
· Also Socio-ecological system
Social-Ecological Systems framework @ Ostrom Workshop, Indiana University
Social-Ecological Systems Meta-Analysis Database
Socio-ecological system @ ScienceDirect
Social-ecological or socio-ecological system @ IPBES (glossary entry)
Socio-ecological system @ Wikipedia
Metacoupling & telecoupling
Select commentary on Garret Hardin's "Tragedy of the Commons"
· Very much different from the notion of "the commons"—but also very much widely associated
with it—is the problematic notion of the "tragedy of the commons."
· For a very helpful bibliography, see: Introduction to Common Pool Resource Theory,
compiled by Dr. Rebecca L. Gruby
Amend, Alex. 2019. First as tragedy, then as fascism. The Baffler, September 26.
Cox, Susan Jane Buck. 1985. No tragedy of the commons. Environmental Ethics 7, no. 1: 49-61.
eJolt. Tragedy of the commons: Hardin's mistake.
Janssen, Marco A., Skaidra Smith-Heisters, Rimjhim Aggarwal, and Michael L. Schoon. 2019. ‘Tragedy of the commons’ as conventional wisdom in sustainability education. Environmental Education Research 25, no. 11: 1587-1604.
Hunter, Lori M., and Aseem Prakash. 2019. Hardin’s oversimplification of population growth. Nature Sustainability 2, 78-79.
Kestenbaum, David. 2009. Climate change is victim of ‘tragedy of the commons’. NPR Oregon Public Broadcasting, Morning Edition
Mildenberger, Matto. 2019. The tragedy of the tragedy of the commons. Scientific American, April 23.
On the Commons. No date. Celebrating the commons.
Patt, Anthony. 2017. Beyond the tragedy of the commons: Reframing effective climate change governance. Energy Research & Social Science 34, 1-3.
Webster, D. G. 2015. Beyond the tragedy in global fisheries. MIT Press.
Link to Hardin's 1968 paper in Science:
Governance, SES, “the commons” & common-pool resource management
Notes:
· SES ~ Social-Ecological Systems ("complex, integrated
systems in which humans are part of nature")
· This page includes coverage of the "global commons," of
which there are, generally speaking, four complex
international regimes (links are mostly to respective
EarthWeb.info pages):