Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Sep 5, 2021 · First posited in 1968 by American ecologist Garret Hardin, the Tragedy of the Commons describes a situation where shared environmental resources are overused and exploited, and eventually depleted, posing risks to everyone involved.

  2. Feb 6, 2019 · The tragedy of the commons explains many of today's sustainability issues. We explore 5 tragedy of the commons examples and possible solutions.

  3. Aug 12, 2024 · tragedy of the commons, concept highlighting the conflict between individual and collective rationality. The idea of the tragedy of the commons was made popular by the American ecologist Garrett Hardin, who used the analogy of ranchers grazing their animals on a common field.

  4. Jun 28, 2019 · The essay ‘The Tragedy of the Commons’ published by the biologist, Garrett Hardin (1968) half a century ago, has been hugely influential in the way environmental governance is approached.

  5. Sep 29, 2014 · Scholars respond to the abstract and simplified narrative that underlies the thesis of the tragedy of the commons, by exploring the historical, economic, political, and cultural context in which individuals and communities cooperatively manage common resources.

  6. Apr 9, 1999 · Thirty years have passed since Garrett Hardin's influential article “The Tragedy of the Commons” (1). At first, many people agreed with Hardin's metaphor that the users of a commons are caught in an inevitable process that leads to the destruction of the very resource on which they depend.

  7. “The tragedy of the commons” (Hardin, 1968) describes how a common-access sheep-grazing pasture will degrade as each individual herder seeks to improve their own outcome by increasing their own sheep numbers (an individual gain), while the common pasture becomes overgrazed (a collective cost).

  8. Jun 22, 2019 · Tragedy of the Commons. In the past decades, the world has become increasingly concerned with environmental destruction. Every year there are thousands of articles on fisheries failure, soil erosion, deforestation, loss of wildlife habitat, depletion of soil, acid rain, etc.

  9. Ecologist Garrett Hardin's ‘tragedy of the commons’ ( Hardin, 1968) has proven a useful concept for understanding how we have come to be at the brink of numerous environmental catastrophes.

  10. Hardin's Tragedy of the Commons model predicts the eventual overexploi- tation or degradation of all resources used in common. Given this unambig- uous prediction, a surprising number of cases exist in which users have been able to restrict access to the resource and establish rules among themselves for its sustainable use.

  1. People also search for