Hybrid institutions: applications of common property theory beyond discrete property regimes

Property rights theory has contributed a great deal to global understanding of the factors shaping the management, governance and sustainability of discrete property regimes (individual, State, commons). Yet as the commons become increasingly altered and enclosed and management challenges extend bey...

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Autores principales: German, L., Keeler, A.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20314
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author German, L.
Keeler, A.
author_browse German, L.
Keeler, A.
author_facet German, L.
Keeler, A.
author_sort German, L.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Property rights theory has contributed a great deal to global understanding of the factors shaping the management, governance and sustainability of discrete property regimes (individual, State, commons). Yet as the commons become increasingly altered and enclosed and management challenges extend beyond the boundaries of any given unit of property, institutional theory must extend beyond discrete property regimes. This paper argues that as natural resource management challenges grow more complex and interconnected, common property theory in the Ostrom tradition remains an essential component of successful management solutions – for common pool resources, public and private goods alike. Building on the commons and externality literature in general, and the Ostrom and Coasean traditions in particular, we propose the use of the term “hybrid institution” to explore the governance of common or connected interests within and between diverse property regimes. Following a general introduction to a set of propositions for encompassing this expanded realm of application of commons theory, we use the literature on integrated natural resource management to frame the scope of “commons” issues facing rural communities today. Empirical and action research from eastern Africa and logical arguments are each used to illustrate and sharpen the focus of our propositions so that they can be tested and refined in future research. This analysis demonstrates the instrumental potential of the concept of hybrid institutions as a framework for shaping more productive engagements with seemingly intractable natural resource management challenges at farm and landscape scale. Our analysis suggests that central elements of the Ostrom and Coasean traditions can be complementary explanatory lenses for contemporary resource conflict and management.
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spelling CGSpace203142025-01-24T14:19:45Z Hybrid institutions: applications of common property theory beyond discrete property regimes German, L. Keeler, A. tenure rights tenure systems property rights externalities Property rights theory has contributed a great deal to global understanding of the factors shaping the management, governance and sustainability of discrete property regimes (individual, State, commons). Yet as the commons become increasingly altered and enclosed and management challenges extend beyond the boundaries of any given unit of property, institutional theory must extend beyond discrete property regimes. This paper argues that as natural resource management challenges grow more complex and interconnected, common property theory in the Ostrom tradition remains an essential component of successful management solutions – for common pool resources, public and private goods alike. Building on the commons and externality literature in general, and the Ostrom and Coasean traditions in particular, we propose the use of the term “hybrid institution” to explore the governance of common or connected interests within and between diverse property regimes. Following a general introduction to a set of propositions for encompassing this expanded realm of application of commons theory, we use the literature on integrated natural resource management to frame the scope of “commons” issues facing rural communities today. Empirical and action research from eastern Africa and logical arguments are each used to illustrate and sharpen the focus of our propositions so that they can be tested and refined in future research. This analysis demonstrates the instrumental potential of the concept of hybrid institutions as a framework for shaping more productive engagements with seemingly intractable natural resource management challenges at farm and landscape scale. Our analysis suggests that central elements of the Ostrom and Coasean traditions can be complementary explanatory lenses for contemporary resource conflict and management. 2010 2012-06-04T09:13:15Z 2012-06-04T09:13:15Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20314 en German, L., Keeler, A. 2010. Hybrid institutions: applications of common property theory beyond discrete property regimes . International Journal of the Commons :571-596. ISSN: 1875-0281.
spellingShingle tenure rights
tenure systems
property rights
externalities
German, L.
Keeler, A.
Hybrid institutions: applications of common property theory beyond discrete property regimes
title Hybrid institutions: applications of common property theory beyond discrete property regimes
title_full Hybrid institutions: applications of common property theory beyond discrete property regimes
title_fullStr Hybrid institutions: applications of common property theory beyond discrete property regimes
title_full_unstemmed Hybrid institutions: applications of common property theory beyond discrete property regimes
title_short Hybrid institutions: applications of common property theory beyond discrete property regimes
title_sort hybrid institutions applications of common property theory beyond discrete property regimes
topic tenure rights
tenure systems
property rights
externalities
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20314
work_keys_str_mv AT germanl hybridinstitutionsapplicationsofcommonpropertytheorybeyonddiscretepropertyregimes
AT keelera hybridinstitutionsapplicationsofcommonpropertytheorybeyonddiscretepropertyregimes