Developing an Analytical Framework for Multiple-Use Commons
- 1 July 1998
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Theoretical Politics
- Vol. 10 (3) , 347-383
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0951692898010003008
Abstract
Much of the work on common-pool resources has tended to focus on `single-use' commons, where the resource system is used for extraction of a single `use' unit. However, as traditional commons evolve, research that explains the persistence of common-pool resources with multiple ownership, use and management structures will become increasingly relevant. This paper extends the analytical framework put forward by Oakerson (1986, 1992), for application to multiple-use common-pools, where multiple types of use are made of the resource system. Four components are introduced: (1) multiple-use analysis of physical and technical attributes; (2) multilevel analysis of decision-making arrangements; (3) social characteristics of the broad user community; and (4) analysis of contextual factors. The multiple-use framework facilitates the understanding of multiple-use commons in a chosen time period and institutional change over time. The example of the New Forest commons in England is used to explain the operation of the framework in a field setting.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Questioning the Assumptions of the "Tragedy of the Commons" Model of FisheriesLand Economics, 1996
- Communication, commitment, and cooperation in social dilemma.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1994
- Tenures in Transition, Tenures in Conflict: Examples from the Zimbabwe Social Forest1Rural Sociology, 1993
- CO‐OPERATION AS POOLINGSociologia Ruralis, 1992
- The Tragedy of the Commons: Twenty-two years laterHuman Ecology, 1990
- Fishermen's Co-management: The Case of the Lofoten FisheryHuman Organization, 1989
- Resources and Economic Development: An Institutionalist PerspectiveJournal of Economic Issues, 1985
- The Village Against the Center: Resource Depletion in South AsiaAmerican Journal of Agricultural Economics, 1984
- Quasi-Option Value and the Expected Value of InformationThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1980
- The Tragedy of the CommonsScience, 1968