Lexington Books
Pages: 460
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-0-7391-9113-2 • Hardback • April 2018 • $160.00 • (£123.00)
978-0-7391-9112-5 • eBook • April 2018 • $152.00 • (£117.00)
Daniel H. Cole is professor of law and professor of public and environmental affairs at Indiana University Bloomington.
Michael D. McGinnis is associate dean for social & historical sciences and graduate education in the College of Arts and Sciences and professor of political science at Indiana University Bloomington.
Introduction to Volume 4
Part I: Climate Change and Sustainability
Chapter 1: Organization of Decision-Making Arrangements and the Development of Atmospheric Resources, by Vincent Ostrom
Chapter 2: Revisiting the Commons: Local Lessons, Global Challenges, by Elinor Ostrom, Joanna Burger, Christopher B. Field, Richard B. Norgaard, and David Policansky
Chapter 3: Earth System Science for Global Sustainability: Grand Challenges, by W. Reid, D. Chen, L. Goldfarb, H. Hackmann, Y. Lee, K. Mokhele, E. Ostrom, K. Raivio, J. Rockstrom, H. Schellnhuber, and A. Whyte
Chapter 4: A Polycentric Approach for Coping with Climate Change, by Elinor Ostrom
Chapter 5: Advantages of a Polycentric Approach to Climate Change Policy, by Daniel H. Cole
Part II: The Artifactual Commons: Information, Infrastructure, and Public Health
Chapter 6: Ideas, Artifacts, and Facilities: Information as a Common-Pool Resource, by Charlotte Hess and Elinor Ostrom
Chapter 7: Constructing Commons in the Cultural Environment, by Michael J. Madison, Brett M. Frischmann, and Katherine J. Strandburg
Chapter 8: Learning from Lin: Lessons and Cautions from the Natural Commons for the Knowledge Commons, by Daniel H. Cole
Chapter 9: The governance of Infrastructures as Common-Pool Resources, by Rolf Kunneke and Mattias Finger
Chapter 10: The Science Commons in Health Research: STructure, Function, and Value, by Robert Cook-Deegan
Chapter 11: Commons, Institutional Diversity, and Polycentric Governance in US Health Policy, by Michael D. McGinnis
Part III: Continuing Projects
Chapter 12: Digging Deeper into Hardin's Pasture: The Complex Institutional Structure of "The Tragedy of the Commons" by Daniel H. Cole, Graham Epstein, and Michael D. McGinn
Chapter 13: Building a Diagnostic Ontology of Social-Ecological Systems, by Ulrich J. Frey and Michael Cox
Chapter 14: Polycentric Transformation in Kenyan Water governance: A Dynamic Analysis of Institutional and Social-Ecological Change, by Paul McCord, Jampel Dell'Angelo, Elizabeth Baldwin, and Tom Evans
Part IV: Persisting Challenges
Chapter 15: Coevolving Relationships between Political Science Economics, by Elinor Ostrom
Chapter 16: Policy Analysis in the Future of Good Societies, by Elinor Ostrom
About the Contributors
This volume completes and brings to a climax this definitive compendium of readings in honor of Elinor and Vincent Ostrom. It contains pathbreaking essays by the Ostroms and others on polycentric governance, climate change, sustainability and other vital issues. It travels well beyond Lin’s famous work on common-pool resources, but it extends analytical frameworks that she originally developed in that context. This work is on the frontier of discovery in social science and it addresses several of the most urgent problems of our time. It is a magnificent memorial to the Ostroms and their legacy.
— Geoffrey M. Hodgson, University of Hertfordshire
With this volume, Daniel H. Cole and Michael D. McGinnis complete the task they set for themselves, to bring out a four-volume compendium of readings in honor of Elinor and Vincent Ostrom. This is truly an admirable achievement, conveying a might lesson on empirically informed theory as the touchstone of good social science. By its very nature, then, the volume is not the final volume of Elinor Ostrom and the Bloomington School of Political Economy but a point of departure for new avenues of inquiry. The message is clear: the Ostrom ideas and research methods can flourish and expand without the Ostroms—just as Vincent and Lin hoped.
— Filippo Sabetti, McGill University
This is a remarkable collection that includes a beautiful mix of classics and less-known papers. The volume promises to become an extremely valuable reference for public policy scholars in years to come. Despite the diversity of contributions, all papers demonstrate, in their own unique ways, how relevant and valuable the Workshop approach to institutional analysis is for public policy applications.
— Krister Andersson, University of Colorado