Innovation in Natural Resource Management: The Role of Property Rights and Collective Action in Developing Countries

innovation in natural resource management: the role of property rights and collective action in developing countries

more information about Innovation in Natural Resource Management: The Role of Property Rights and Collective Action in Developing Countries

Innovation in Natural Resource Management: The Role of Property Rights and Collective Action in Developing Countries

Editorial Reviews
Review

"The authors of this excellent book have sought to reach beyond narrow ways of thinking about property rights and collective action. They have succeeded in bringing together outstanding studies from many parts of the world. Their theoretical work provides a good understanding of the linkage between property rights, collective action, and technologies related to natural resource management. The case studies do an excellent job of illustrating the major arguments in their theoretical framework. Both scholars and practitioners will find something of value in this book." -- Elinor Ostrom, Arthur F. Bentley Professor of Government, and Codirector, Center for the Study of Institutions, Population, and Environmental Change, Indiana University

"This well researched volume takes the research agenda on property rights, collective action, and natural resource management a significant step forward by demonstrating not just the importance of these issues but alsotheir complex nature. The contributors to this volume demonstrate that when it comes to policymaking, conventional wisdom provides at best a point of departure, but rarely the full answers to the issues arising in implementation. I find this one of the best source books for both ideas and empirical evidence in research on natural resource management and how it is shaped by economic, cultural, and technological factors." -- Goran Hyden, Distinguished University Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Florida

Book Description

International agricultural research is expanding beyond the development of annual crop technologies for individual farms to the development of longer-term natural resource management techniques for entire landscapes. But technologies or practices with a long lag time between investment and returns are unlikely to be adopted by farmers unless they have secure rights to the underlying resources (property rights). Similarly, technologies that span multiple farms are unlikely to be adopted unless neighbors and groups work together (collective action). But little is known about the way property rights and collective action in developing countries mediate the adoption of technologies by farmers and groups.

To address this information gap, this volume brings together international experts in economics, sociology, and natural resource management to examine the links among property rights, collective action, and technological change for a variety of technologies across a range of community contexts in the developing world. Authors focus on the reciprocal relationships between community institutions and technologies, the role of property rights in conflicts between crop and livestock production systems, and the way that collective action differs across landscapes. A conceptual framework, methodological approaches, and "best bet"practices are presented to help guide future research.

Researchers, policy analysts, and students interested in the links between environmental sustainability, economic growth, equity and poverty alleviation, and technology adoption will benefit from this volume.

Contributors: George Arab, Michael Bannister, Regina Birner, Ana Milena de la Cruz, Simeon Ehui, Sarah Gavian, Gustave Gintzburger, María del Pilar Guerrero, Hasantha Gunaweera, Peter Hazell, Khalil Jani, Anna Knox, Nancy McCarthy, Ruth Meinzen-Dick, Woudyalew Mulatu, Thomas Nordblom, Onyango Okello, Keijiro Otsuka, John Pender, Frank Place, Jonathan Rae, Helle Munk Ravnborg, Sara J. Scherr, Glenn R. Smucker, Brent Swallow, Kimberly A. Swallow, Jon D. Unruh, Justine Wangila, Olaf Westermann, and T. Anderson White.

Innovation in Natural Resource Management: The Role of Property Rights and Collective Action in Developing Countries

Innovation in Natural Resource Management: The Role of Property Rights and Collective Action in Developing Countries,Ruth Meinzen-Dick,International Food Policy Research Institute,0801871433,Business & Economics,Business / Economics / Finance,Business/Economics,Case studies,Developing countries,Development - Economic Development,Development - Sustainable Development,General,Management,Natural resources,Right of property,Agriculture & Farming,Development economics,Environmental economics,Management of land & natural resources,Property & real estate

English Books:

  1. Inside John Deere: A Factory History (Color Tech)
  2. Irrigated Agriculture and the Environment (The Management of Water Resources Series)
  3. Jojoba: New Crop for Arid Lands, New Raw Material for Industry
  4. Landscape Design: A Practical Approach (5th Edition)
  5. Landscape Surveying
  6. Light-Activated Pesticides (ACS Symposium Series)
  7. Livestock Feeds and Feeding (5th Edition)
  8. Los Mestenos: Spanish Ranching in Texas, 1721-1821 (Centennial Series of the Association of Former Students, Texas a & M University)
  9. Measuring and Auditing Broiler Welfare (CABI Publishing)
  10. Metal Fabrication Technology for Agriculture

English Books

English Books

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