“Analyzing Long-Enduring, Self-Organized, and Self-Governed CPRs”

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“Analyzing Long-Enduring, Self-Organized, and Self-Governed CPRs” is a chapter in Elinor Ostrom’s work that examines how certain common-pool resource systems manage to persist over time through locally crafted rules and collective self-governance.

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Predicate Object
instanceOf book chapter
appliesTo fisheries
forests
grazing lands
irrigation systems
arguesThat local users can craft effective rules for CPR management
locally tailored rules outperform imposed uniform policies in many CPR settings
self-governed CPRs can endure without centralized control
author Elinor Ostrom NERFINISHED
contributesTo theory of polycentric governance
understanding of institutional robustness
discipline environmental governance
political economy
emphasizes congruence between rules and local conditions
graduated sanctions for rule violations
importance of clearly defined boundaries in CPRs
low-cost conflict-resolution mechanisms
nested enterprises for larger CPR systems
participation of users in rule-making
recognition of rights to organize
examines adaptation of rules over time
conditions for long-term sustainability of CPRs
conflict-resolution mechanisms
design of local institutions
monitoring and enforcement arrangements
rule-making by resource users
focusesOn locally crafted rules
long-enduring common-pool resource systems
self-governed resource regimes
self-organization of resource users
language English
mainTopic collective action
common-pool resources
institutional analysis
self-governance
partOf Elinor Ostrom’s work on common-pool resources
relatedTo Governing the Commons NERFINISHED
theoreticalFramework Institutional Analysis and Development framework NERFINISHED
usesConcept design principles for robust CPR institutions
usesMethod comparative case study analysis

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Governing the Commons hasPart “Analyzing Long-Enduring, Self-Organized, and Self-Governed CPRs”