hidden
Image Database Export Citations

Menu:

Property Rights in a Canadian Mountain Watershed: A Case Study from the Columbia River Valley, British Columbia

Show full item record

Type: Conference Paper
Author: Stevens, Greg
Conference: Voices from the Commons, the Sixth Biennial Conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Property
Location: Berkeley, CA
Conf. Date: June 5-8, 1996
Date: 1996
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/5601
Sector: Land Tenure & Use
Social Organization
Water Resource & Irrigation
Region: North America
Subject(s): water resources
Columbia River
mountain regions
property rights
IASC
Abstract: "In the summer of 1995, an interdisciplinary team investigated property rights and biophysical aspects of sustainability in and around the village of Nakusp, B.C., in the Canadian Cordillera. A temporal review of land use was used to bring together historical trends of resource exploitation, overlapping property rights and evolving pressures for land use change. Community interviews, site observations and an extensive literature review were supported by analysis of satellite imagery, air photos, and biogeophysical resource maps within a Geographic Information System. Due to the history and culture of resource exploitation in the area, rights and 'rules' of land use, defined and practiced locally in the watersheds of the Columbia River valley, basically fall under state property and private property regimes. Although Canadian resource exploitation is highly articulated in law, it was found that there is an undertone of public participation at all levels. Strictly speaking community-level institutions are weak and poorly defined and the only local common property institution concerned mushroom gathering in the forest. At the regional scale, however, 'common-property'-like structures are evolving as a result of extensive public participation and stakeholder consultation concerned with future land use regulations. In comparison with the Kullu Valley mountain forest commons, the Nakusp area has an evolving strength in regional commons institutions. The comparison raises the question, 'Are local and regional institutions for the commons complementary or competitive?'"

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Property Rights ... lley, British Columbia.pdf 3.148Mb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following document type(s)

Show full item record