Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Table of government documents
- 1 Pollution and property: the conceptual framework
- 2 Public property/regulatory solutions to the tragedy of open access
- 3 Mixed property/regulatory regimes for environmental protection
- 4 Institutional and technological limits of mixed property/regulatory regimes
- 5 The theory and limits of free-market environmentalism (a private property/nonregulatory regime)
- 6 The limited utility of common property regimes for environmental protection
- 7 The complexities of property regime choice for environmental protection
- 8 When property regimes collide: the “takings” problem
- 9 Final thoughts
- List of references
- Index
7 - The complexities of property regime choice for environmental protection
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Table of government documents
- 1 Pollution and property: the conceptual framework
- 2 Public property/regulatory solutions to the tragedy of open access
- 3 Mixed property/regulatory regimes for environmental protection
- 4 Institutional and technological limits of mixed property/regulatory regimes
- 5 The theory and limits of free-market environmentalism (a private property/nonregulatory regime)
- 6 The limited utility of common property regimes for environmental protection
- 7 The complexities of property regime choice for environmental protection
- 8 When property regimes collide: the “takings” problem
- 9 Final thoughts
- List of references
- Index
Summary
I have examined four basic property-based approaches to environmental protection (defined in terms of avoiding the tragedy of open access): public/state property, mixed public/state and private/individual property, pure private/individual property, and common property. Each approach has proven useful for resource conservation in some circumstances. None, however, has proven optimal for averting the tragedy of open access in every circumstance. Hence, this book's mantra: there is no universal, first-best property-based solution for environmental protection in this second-best world.
The next task is to assess the myriad factors that explain property regime choice in various ecological, technological, institutional, and economic circumstances. The objective is not to develop a normative theory, or even to generate useful predictions (although that would be a welcome consequence), but to understand and appreciate the complexities of property regime choice. This chapter offers an informal model that is, of necessity, rudimentary. To elaborate a fully fledged model for selecting property-based regimes would require an entire book of its own, if it could be done at all.
Section 1 of the chapter sets out the informal model and compares it with models offered by other authors. Section 2 introduces various complicating factors – everything from resource location and size to historical contingency and ideology – that limit the normative and predictive capability of any theoretical model.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Pollution and PropertyComparing Ownership Institutions for Environmental Protection, pp. 130 - 153Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002