Description

Book Synopsis
In addition to winning the 2009 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences for her path-breaking research on economic governance, especially the commons, Elinor (Lin) Ostrom also made important contributions to other fields of political economy and public policy. This four-volume compendium of papers written by Lin (often with coauthors, most notably her husband, Vincent), along with papers by others expanding on her work, brings together the strands of her entire empirical, analytical, theoretical, and methodological research program. Together with Vincent's important theoretical contributions, they defined a distinctive Bloomington School of political-economic thought.Volume 2 examines Lin's work on the commons, in which she demonstrated that, in many cases, local resource users can solve collective-action problems through common-property management regimes. It comprises papers, including some that are not well known, related to and building on the findings of Governing the Commons (1990). Pa

Trade Review
This edited volume serves an important need, unmet until its publication. The carefully selected works included in the book coherently showcase the key ideas and assumptions that underlie research on CPR management by Elinor Ostrom and other Bloomington School scholars and inform the design principles identified in Governing the Commons (Ostrom, 1990).... The Resource Governance volume, thus, serves two complementary purposes. First, the volume lays a foundation for probing the institutional settings in which voluntary behavior occurs for the management or delivery of community goods and services. Second, the volume has interdisciplinary appeal as a teaching text for courses on nonprofit organizations, voluntary action, and public policy, among many others. By reading this volume, students will learn about the evolution of a highly regarded research program and the key concepts motivating related studies. They will also be able to identify biophysical and social factors that both shape and are shaped by institutions governing collective action. * Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly *
Daniel Cole and Michael McGinnis have done a magnificent job in putting together the most comprehensive, best structured and most representative collection of works that define the core ideas and insights of the Bloomington School. -- Paul Dragos Aligica, George Mason University
This volume is the perfect companion to Elinor Ostrom’s pathbreaking Governing the Commons. Here you will find papers published before and after she wrote that book, revealing how and why her thinking about natural resource governance developed over time. I found this volume to be loaded with insight, and shining with inspiration. -- Scott Barrett, Columbia University
This second volume on the Bloomington School of Political Economy brings together the key contributions of the Ostroms and their colleagues to understanding natural resource governance more insightfully. Combining older and more recent writings, the collection marks highlights, and also traces a genealogy of the writings of Elinor Ostrom. It will find a place in the shelves of all serious scholars and students of the subject. -- Arun Agrawal, University of Michigan

Table of Contents
1. Public Goods and Public Choices Vincent Ostrom and Elinor Ostrom 2. An Agenda for the Study of Institutions Elinor Ostrom 3. How Types of Goods and Property Rights Jointly Affect Collective Action Elinor Ostrom 4. Property-Rights Regimes and Natural Resources: A Conceptual Analysis Edella Schlager and Elinor Ostrom 5. The Variety of Property Systems and Rights in Natural Resources Daniel H. Cole and Elinor Ostrom 6. Reformulating the Commons Elinor Ostrom 7. Coping with Asymmetries in the Commons: Self-Governing Irrigation Systems Can Work Elinor Ostrom and Roy Gardner 8. Design Principles of Robust Property Rights Institutions: What Have We Learned? Elinor Ostrom 9. A Review of Design Principles for Community-Based Natural Resource Management Michael Cox, Gwen Arnold, and Sergio Villamayor-Tomas 10. Developing a Method for Analyzing Institutional Change Elinor Ostrom 11. The Water Economy and its Organization Vincent Ostrom 12. Conditions of Legal and Political Feasibility Vincent Ostrom and Elinor Ostrom 13. Deliberation, Learning, and Institutional Change: The Evolution of Institutions in Judicial Settings William Blomquist and Elinor Ostrom 14. Reflections on “Some Unsettled Problems of Irrigation” Elinor Ostrom

Elinor Ostrom and the Bloomington School of

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    A Hardback by Michael D. McGinnis, Gwen Arnold

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      View other formats and editions of Elinor Ostrom and the Bloomington School of by

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 9/4/2015 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739191088, 978-0739191088
      ISBN10: 073919108X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In addition to winning the 2009 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences for her path-breaking research on economic governance, especially the commons, Elinor (Lin) Ostrom also made important contributions to other fields of political economy and public policy. This four-volume compendium of papers written by Lin (often with coauthors, most notably her husband, Vincent), along with papers by others expanding on her work, brings together the strands of her entire empirical, analytical, theoretical, and methodological research program. Together with Vincent's important theoretical contributions, they defined a distinctive Bloomington School of political-economic thought.Volume 2 examines Lin's work on the commons, in which she demonstrated that, in many cases, local resource users can solve collective-action problems through common-property management regimes. It comprises papers, including some that are not well known, related to and building on the findings of Governing the Commons (1990). Pa

      Trade Review
      This edited volume serves an important need, unmet until its publication. The carefully selected works included in the book coherently showcase the key ideas and assumptions that underlie research on CPR management by Elinor Ostrom and other Bloomington School scholars and inform the design principles identified in Governing the Commons (Ostrom, 1990).... The Resource Governance volume, thus, serves two complementary purposes. First, the volume lays a foundation for probing the institutional settings in which voluntary behavior occurs for the management or delivery of community goods and services. Second, the volume has interdisciplinary appeal as a teaching text for courses on nonprofit organizations, voluntary action, and public policy, among many others. By reading this volume, students will learn about the evolution of a highly regarded research program and the key concepts motivating related studies. They will also be able to identify biophysical and social factors that both shape and are shaped by institutions governing collective action. * Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly *
      Daniel Cole and Michael McGinnis have done a magnificent job in putting together the most comprehensive, best structured and most representative collection of works that define the core ideas and insights of the Bloomington School. -- Paul Dragos Aligica, George Mason University
      This volume is the perfect companion to Elinor Ostrom’s pathbreaking Governing the Commons. Here you will find papers published before and after she wrote that book, revealing how and why her thinking about natural resource governance developed over time. I found this volume to be loaded with insight, and shining with inspiration. -- Scott Barrett, Columbia University
      This second volume on the Bloomington School of Political Economy brings together the key contributions of the Ostroms and their colleagues to understanding natural resource governance more insightfully. Combining older and more recent writings, the collection marks highlights, and also traces a genealogy of the writings of Elinor Ostrom. It will find a place in the shelves of all serious scholars and students of the subject. -- Arun Agrawal, University of Michigan

      Table of Contents
      1. Public Goods and Public Choices Vincent Ostrom and Elinor Ostrom 2. An Agenda for the Study of Institutions Elinor Ostrom 3. How Types of Goods and Property Rights Jointly Affect Collective Action Elinor Ostrom 4. Property-Rights Regimes and Natural Resources: A Conceptual Analysis Edella Schlager and Elinor Ostrom 5. The Variety of Property Systems and Rights in Natural Resources Daniel H. Cole and Elinor Ostrom 6. Reformulating the Commons Elinor Ostrom 7. Coping with Asymmetries in the Commons: Self-Governing Irrigation Systems Can Work Elinor Ostrom and Roy Gardner 8. Design Principles of Robust Property Rights Institutions: What Have We Learned? Elinor Ostrom 9. A Review of Design Principles for Community-Based Natural Resource Management Michael Cox, Gwen Arnold, and Sergio Villamayor-Tomas 10. Developing a Method for Analyzing Institutional Change Elinor Ostrom 11. The Water Economy and its Organization Vincent Ostrom 12. Conditions of Legal and Political Feasibility Vincent Ostrom and Elinor Ostrom 13. Deliberation, Learning, and Institutional Change: The Evolution of Institutions in Judicial Settings William Blomquist and Elinor Ostrom 14. Reflections on “Some Unsettled Problems of Irrigation” Elinor Ostrom

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