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Institutional property rights structure, common pool resource (CPR), tragedy of the urban commons: A Review

Authors :
Gabriel Hoh Teck Ling
Chin Siong Ho
Hishamuddin Mohd Ali
Source :
IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science. 18:012184
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2014.

Abstract

There have been a plethora of researches on the significance of public open space (POS) in contributing to societies' sustainability. However, by virtue of identified maladaptive policy-based-property rights structure, such a shared good becomes vulnerable to tragedy of the urban commons (overexploitation) that subsequently leads to burgeoning number of mismanaged POS e.g., degraded and unkempt urban public spaces. By scrutinising the literatures within property rights domain and commons resources, an objective is highlighted in this paper which is to insightfully discourse institutional property rights structure pertaining to the mechanism, roles and interrelationship between property-rights regimes, bundle of property rights and resource domains; types of goods on how they act upon and tie in the POS with the social quandary. In summary, urban POS tragedy can potentially be triggered by the institutional structure especially if the ownership is left under open-access resource regime and ill-defined property rights which both successively constitute the natures of Common Pool Resource (CPR) within the commons, POS. Therefore, this paper sparks an idea to policy makers that property rights structure is a determinant in sustainably governing the POS in which adaptive assignment of property regimes and property rights are impelled.

Details

ISSN :
17551315
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8405a660e2521a7e805268f60ca005e9