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The Future of the Commons - Beyond Market Failure & Government Regulations (Paperback)
Loot Price: R328
Discovery Miles 3 280
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The Future of the Commons - Beyond Market Failure & Government Regulations (Paperback)
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Loot Price R328
Discovery Miles 3 280
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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Traditional economic models of how to manage environmental problems
relating to renewable natural resources, such as fisheries, have
tended to recommend either government regulation or privatisation
and the explicit definition of property rights. These traditional
models ignore the practical reality of natural resource management.
Many communities are able to spontaneously develop their own
approaches to managing such common-pool resources. In the words of
Mark Pennington: '[Professor Ostrom's] book Governing the Commons
is a superb testament to the understanding that can be gained when
economists observe in close-up detail how people craft arrangements
to solve problems in ways often beyond the imagination of textbook
theorists.' In particular, communities are often able to find
stable and effective ways to define the boundaries of a common-pool
resource, define the rules for its use and effectively enforce
those rules. The effective management of a natural resource often
requires 'polycentric' systems of governance where various entities
have some role in the process. Government may play a role in some
circumstances, perhaps by providing information to resource users
or by assisting enforcement processes through court systems. Elinor
Ostrom's work in this field, for which she won the Nobel Prize in
economics in 2009, was grounded in the detailed empirical study of
how communities managed common-pool resources in practice. It is
essential that we avoid the 'panacea problem'. There is no correct
way to manage common-pool resources that will always be effective.
Different ways of managing resources will be appropriate in
different contexts - for example within different cultures or where
there are different physical characteristics of a natural resource.
Nevertheless, there are principles that we can draw from the
detailed study of the salient features of different cases to help
us understand how different common-pool resources might be best
managed; which rules systems and systems of organisation have the
best chance of success or failure; and so on. Elinor Ostrom's
approach has been praised by the left, who often see it as being
opposed to free-market privatisation initiatives. In fact, her
approach sits firmly within the classical liberal tradition of
political economy. She observes communities freely choosing their
own mechanisms to manage natural resource problems without
government coercion or planning. In developing a viable approach to
the management of the commons, it is important, among other things,
that a resource can be clearly defined and that the rules governing
the use of the resource are adapted to local conditions. This
suggests that rules imposed from outside, such as by government
agencies, are unlikely to be successful. There are important areas
of natural resource management where Elinor Ostrom's ideas should
be adopted to avoid environmental catastrophe. Perhaps the most
obvious example relevant to the UK is in European Union fisheries
policy. Here, there is one centralised model for the management of
the resource that is applied right across the European Union,
ignoring all the evidence about the failure of that approach.
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