hidden
Image Database Export Citations

Menu:

Sustainability and Common-Pool Resources: Alternatives to Tragedy

Show full item record

Type: Journal Article
Author: Carpenter, Stanley R.
Journal: Society for Philosophy and Technology
Volume: 3
Page(s):
Date: 2000
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/2717
Sector: Theory
Region:
Subject(s): common pool resources--theory
collective action
institutions
self-organization
public--private
tragedy of the commons
Ostrom, Elinor
Abstract: "The paradox that individually rational actions collectively can lead to irrational outcomes is exemplified in human appropriation of a class of goods known as 'common-pool resources' (CPR): natural or humanly created resource systems which are large enough to make it costly to exclude potential beneficiaries. Appropriations of common-pool resources for private use tend toward abusive practices that lead to the loss of the resource in question: the tragedy of the commons. Prescriptions for escape from tragedy have involved two institutions, each applied largely in isolation from the other: private markets (the 'hidden hand') and government coercion (Leviathan). Yet examples exist of local institutions that have utilized mixtures of public and private practices and have survived for hundreds of years. "Two problems further exacerbate efforts to avoid the tragic nature of common-pool resource use. One, given the current level of knowledge, the role of the resource is not recognized for what it is. It is, thus, in a fundamental, epistemological sense invisible. Two, if the resource is recognized, it may not be considered scarce, thus placing it outside the scrutiny of economic theory. Both types of error are addressed by the emerging field of ecological economics. "This paper discusses common pool resources, locates the ambiguities that make their identification difficult, and argues that avoidance of a CPR loss is inadequately addressed by sharply separated market and state institutions. When the resource is recognized for what it is, a common-pool good, which is subject to overexploitation, it may be possible to identify creative combinations of public and private institutions that can combine to save that resource. Disparate examples of self-organized enterprises, public/private utilities, and 'green' taxes, to name a few, provide empirical content for developing theories of self-organized collective action."

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
CARPENTE.pdf 53.42Kb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following document type(s)

Show full item record