How do we – and how should we – engage with the natural environment through the concepts of rights and responsibilities? In this book, Michael Cox develops the theory and practice of environmental property rights, moving beyond simplistic assumptions that do not reflect the diversity of arrangements we see in the world. Recognizing this diversity will help us craft better responses to environmental problems in the future with an interdisciplinary foundation in what has worked, or not worked, in the past. Synthesizing a variety of methods and disciplines, Cox explores rights-based environmental policies as well as different cultural approaches to environmental ownership. The result is a book that helps the reader understand the full range of possibilities when it comes to environmental ownership.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Introduction
Part I Collective action and groups
1. The tragedy of the commons
2. Boundaries
3. Kinship, reciprocity and intrinsic value
Part II Bundles of rights
4. Control and use rights
5. Exchange rights
Part III: Property regimes and policy panaceas
6. Policy panaceas
7. Individual and common property
8. States and hybrid regimes
9. Market policies
10. Conclusion
Appendix 1: Ostrom’s design principles
Sobre o autor
Michael Cox is an Associate Professor in the Department of Environmental Studies at Dartmouth College. He has a Ph D in Public Affairs from Indiana University, where he studied under Elinor Ostrom.