Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Nov 16, 2022. It is now read-only.

read /Governing the Commons/ #409

Closed
chadwhitacre opened this issue Nov 20, 2015 · 7 comments
Closed

read /Governing the Commons/ #409

chadwhitacre opened this issue Nov 20, 2015 · 7 comments
Labels

Comments

@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor

At Platform Cooperativism, I learned about Elinor Ostrom from Robin Chase. Looks like we ought to read her Governing the Commons (1990), though maybe we should read "Tragedy of the Commons* (1968) first, for context ... which itself builds on "Two lectures on the checks to population" (1833).

@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor Author

Ordered.

@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor Author

I did read "Tragedy of the Commons," btw. Turns out its an argument for proactive population control by the state.

@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor Author

Also cited by @JanelleOrsi at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kJc60wCbL70#t=17m33s (discovered under #72 (comment)).

@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor Author

The tl;dr:

Ostrom identified eight "design principles" of stable local common pool resource management:[22]

  1. Clearly defined boundaries (clear definition of the contents of the common pool resource and effective exclusion of external un-entitled parties);
  2. Rules regarding the appropriation and provision of common resources that are adapted to local conditions;
  3. Collective-choice arrangements that allow most resource appropriators to participate in the decision-making process;
  4. Effective monitoring by monitors who are part of or accountable to the appropriators;
  5. A scale of graduated sanctions for resource appropriators who violate community rules;
  6. Mechanisms of conflict resolution that are cheap and of easy access;
  7. Self-determination of the community recognized by higher-level authorities; and
  8. In the case of larger common-pool resources, organization in the form of multiple layers of nested enterprises, with small local CPRs at the base level.

@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor Author

I started this. I read the preface and am into the first chapter.

@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor Author

Finished!

@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor Author

Some thoughts starting in https://github.com/whit537/openorg/issues/5.

Sign up for free to subscribe to this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in.
Labels
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

1 participant