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11.4: The Tragedy of the Commons and Common Pool Resources

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    291464
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    The concept of the tragedy of the commons was introduced by ecologist Garrett Hardin in his 1968 article, which describes how individual actions driven by self-interest can lead to the depletion of shared resources. Hardin illustrates this with the example of a common pasture shared by multiple herders, each incentivized to add more cattle to maximize personal gain. As each herder acts in their own interest, the pasture becomes overgrazed, eventually harming all herders by degrading the resource they depend on. This dilemma highlights the difficulty of managing shared resources when individual benefits come at a collective cost, making it a fundamental issue in environmental policy and international relations​.

    While Hardin’s tragedy of the commons implies that shared resources are inevitably doomed to overuse, political scientist Elinor Ostrom challenged this view with her 1990 work, Governing the Commons. Ostrom argued that communities could effectively manage common resources through cooperative governance rather than government control or privatization. Based on extensive field research, she identified successful examples where local communities created rules and norms for resource management, demonstrating that people could self-organize to prevent resource depletion. Ostrom outlined design principles for effective management of common resources, including:

    1. Clearly defined boundaries: Community members need to know who has access to the resource and understand its limits.
    2. Collective decision-making: Resource users participate in setting and enforcing rules.
    3. Monitoring and enforcement: Local monitors ensure compliance, deterring overuse through shared accountability.
    4. Conflict-resolution mechanisms: Quick, low-cost avenues for resolving disputes among users prevent tensions from escalating.
    5. Recognition of community authority: External authorities respect the community’s self-established rules.

    Ostrom’s findings contradicted Hardin’s assumption that individuals would inevitably act selfishly, suggesting instead that communities could manage resources sustainably. Her work offered a cooperative framework for addressing global environmental issues, showing that grassroots governance structures could complement international agreements in safeguarding the global commons.


    11.4: The Tragedy of the Commons and Common Pool Resources is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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