E-Book, Englisch, 288 Seiten
Reihe: Earthscan Research Editions
Institutional Dynamics and Economics
E-Book, Englisch, 288 Seiten
Reihe: Earthscan Research Editions
ISBN: 978-1-136-55560-2
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
The book is organized into four parts. The first discusses institutional diversity and contextual change. Following this, institutional misfit is analysed with a strong focus on the long-term impacts of colonial structures in the Asia-Pacific region. The book then discusses experiences with institutional dynamics in order to ease the tension of such misfits before examining future research needs.
Ultimately, through careful argument and by deploying original research, the authors make the case that institutional arrangements cannot be perceived as a set of parameters that can be optimized and locked in for the most efficient functioning of a system; nor can institutions be evaluated outside the context in which they were developed. This is powerful, thought-provoking and important reading for academics, researchers, policy-makers and professionals in resource, institutional and environmental economics and land use planning and policy across the full range of natural resource sectors from forestry to agriculture.
Published with CSIRO.
Cover image: Blue Flower of Life (c) Theresa J. Richardson 2006
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface * Part I: The Context * Institutional Dynamics and Natural Resource Management * Part II: Institutional Diversity and Contextual Change * Multiple Institutions for Multiple Outcomes * The Challenge of Maintaining the Salience of Common Property Rights with Increasing Cultural and Socio-economic Heterogeneity * Part III: Institutional Misfit * Traditional and Customary Land Tenure and Appurtenant Rights: Reflections on Critical Factors of an Ecologically Sustainable Australian Outback * Substantive and Procedural Dimensions of Old and New Forms of Property: IPRs, the CBD and the Protection of Traditional Ecological Knowledge * Myth, Embeddedness and Tradition: Property Rights Perceptions from the Pacific * Indigenous Property Right to Water: Environmental Flows, Cultural Values and Tradeable Property Rights * Commercial Forestry: An Economic Development Opportunity Consistent with the Property Rights of Wik People to Natural Resources * Coping with a Tragedy of the Australian Aboriginal Common * Part IV: Experiences in Dealing with Institutional Dynamics * Designing Robust Common Property Regimes for Collaboration towards Rural Sustainability * The Need to Consider the Administration of Property Rights and Restrictions before Creating them * Building Institutional Incentives in Dying Communities * The Potential for Market Mechanisms to Achieve Vegetation Protection in the Desert Uplands * A Metaphysical Grounding for Ecologically Sustainable Property Rights * Index