| Detalle de la Publicación |
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Managing the Commons: Markets, Commodity Chains and Certification.

Agotado
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Editor Leticia Merino Pérez Jim Robson
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| Lugar de edición: |
México |
| Fecha de edición: |
2005 |
| Num edición: |
Primera |
| Num reimpresión: |
0 |
| Número de páginas: |
74 |
| Características físicas: |
27 x 21 cm. |
| Peso: |
-- |
| ISBN: |
968-817-736-9 |
| Tipo de edición: |
Rústica |
| Formato: |
Impreso / Electrónico |
Resumen: Este volumen es uno de cuatro libros elaborados para dar seguimiento a la Décima Conferencia Bienal de la Asociación Internacional para el Estudio de la Propiedad Común (IASCP), celebrada los días 9 a 13 de agosto de 2004 en Oaxaca, sur de México.
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Índice: Foreword. Elinor Ostrom
A word from the Editors
Thematic Introduction. Can Common Property Regimes Alleviate Poverty? Markets and their Absence in the Common Property Literature. David Bray
Time for Something Different: Putting Markets To The Service of the Forest Poor. Sara J. Scherr Andy White Augusta Molnar David Kaimowitz
Who Says It¿s Organic? Certification and Smallholder Participation in the Global Market. Alma Amalia González Ronald Nigh
Mapping Access to Benefits in Cameroon Using Commodity Chain Analysis: A Case Study of the Azobé Timber Chain. Wynet Smith
Managing the Commons: Markets, Commodity Chains and Certification Key Issues, Recommendations and Questions. Dan Klooster
Reseña: In this volume, Scherr, White, Molnar,and Kaimowitz review the findings of multiple studies of devolution of ownership to local communities and stress that strong rights to some of the bundles related to property rights, such as access rights, may be more important than having the entire bundle. Amalia Gonzalez and Nigh use the findings from collective action and common-property theory to raise serious questions about the expansion of certification to include a wider diversity of participants leading to the threat of free-riding of existing practices. In the third article, W. Smith follows the timber commodity chain in detail from the use of chainsaws for logging in Cameroon to the sale of timber by chain stores all over the world. Klooster summarizes a dozen policy recommendations related to markets and certification processes that can be derived from the articles in the volume and then focuses on some of the remaining questions related to ways of mitigating global inequality. He raises the possibility of market transactions eroding cooperative forms of organization.
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