Commons (economics)/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Commons (economics), or pages that link to Commons (economics) or to this page or whose text contains "Commons (economics)".
Parent topics
Subtopics
- Backyard commons: Add brief definition or description
- Carrying capacity: Add brief definition or description
- Common goods: Add brief definition or description
- Common pool resources: Add brief definition or description
- Creative commons: Add brief definition or description
- Enclosure: The act of terminating a commons through the elimination or transformation of shared resources into individually owned or controlled ones. [e]
- Knowledge commons: Add brief definition or description
- Intellectual commons: Add brief definition or description
- Natural commons: Add brief definition or description
- Science commons: Add brief definition or description
- Social commons: Add brief definition or description
People
- David Bollier: Add brief definition or description
- Garett Hardin: Add brief definition or description
- Charlotte Hess: Add brief definition or description
- Jyh-An Lee: Add brief definition or description
- Mancur Olson: American economist and political scientist (1932-1998) who argued in his book, The Logic of Collective Action: Public Goods and the Theory of Groups (1965), that people act in groups in response to incentives and that members of large groups do not act on shared, or common interest unless motivated by personal gain. [e]
- Elinor Ostrom: American political scientist known especially for her interdisciplinary research on common pool resource management who in 2009 became the first woman to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics. [e]
- Commons theory of voluntary action: A theory that focuses on the role of associations and assemblies in social commons and human-managed natural commons like agricultural fields, fishing grounds and forests. [e]
- Civil society: The space for social activity outside the market, state and household; the arena of uncoerced collective action around shared interests, purposes and values. [e]
- Theory of groups: Add brief definition or description
- Prisoner's dilemma: In game theory, a non-zero sum game in which mutual cooperation is better for all participants than uncoordinated attempts to maximize individual personal gains. [e]