Analysis of material, social, and moral governance in natural resource management in southern Namibia

In southern Namibia ineffective enforcement contributes to natural resource degradation. We analyse the root causes of ineffective enforcement applying diverse methods. In the first step we develop a conceptual framework distinguishing between moral, social, and material enforcement. In the second s...

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Main Authors: Thomas Falk, Bjoern Vollan, Michael Kirk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services) 2012-08-01
Series:International Journal of the Commons
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/307
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spelling doaj-d672f5ff04684236bc5a19bb12e1b4b02020-11-25T03:09:13ZengUtrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services)International Journal of the Commons1875-02812012-08-016227130110.18352/ijc.307149Analysis of material, social, and moral governance in natural resource management in southern NamibiaThomas Falk0Bjoern Vollan1Michael Kirk2Universtiy of MarburgLeibniz Center for Tropical Marine EcologyUniversity of MarburgIn southern Namibia ineffective enforcement contributes to natural resource degradation. We analyse the root causes of ineffective enforcement applying diverse methods. In the first step we develop a conceptual framework distinguishing between moral, social, and material enforcement. In the second step we analyse water and rangeland management regulations through the filter of our conceptual framework. In the third step we conduct economic experiments in order to gain additional insights into the characteristics of selected elements of the framework. We observe that social enforcement has the strongest impact on encouraging cooperative behaviour. Water governance in our cases makes more direct use of social enforcement, which is one factor contributing to its relative success compared to rangeland governance. We draw the general conclusion that existing moral and social norms should be considered as starting points for the establishment of formal rules because norms are more costly to establish but cheaper to apply.https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/307common pool resourceseconomic experimentsenforcementinstitutional interactionsnamibia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Falk
Bjoern Vollan
Michael Kirk
spellingShingle Thomas Falk
Bjoern Vollan
Michael Kirk
Analysis of material, social, and moral governance in natural resource management in southern Namibia
International Journal of the Commons
common pool resources
economic experiments
enforcement
institutional interactions
namibia
author_facet Thomas Falk
Bjoern Vollan
Michael Kirk
author_sort Thomas Falk
title Analysis of material, social, and moral governance in natural resource management in southern Namibia
title_short Analysis of material, social, and moral governance in natural resource management in southern Namibia
title_full Analysis of material, social, and moral governance in natural resource management in southern Namibia
title_fullStr Analysis of material, social, and moral governance in natural resource management in southern Namibia
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of material, social, and moral governance in natural resource management in southern Namibia
title_sort analysis of material, social, and moral governance in natural resource management in southern namibia
publisher Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services)
series International Journal of the Commons
issn 1875-0281
publishDate 2012-08-01
description In southern Namibia ineffective enforcement contributes to natural resource degradation. We analyse the root causes of ineffective enforcement applying diverse methods. In the first step we develop a conceptual framework distinguishing between moral, social, and material enforcement. In the second step we analyse water and rangeland management regulations through the filter of our conceptual framework. In the third step we conduct economic experiments in order to gain additional insights into the characteristics of selected elements of the framework. We observe that social enforcement has the strongest impact on encouraging cooperative behaviour. Water governance in our cases makes more direct use of social enforcement, which is one factor contributing to its relative success compared to rangeland governance. We draw the general conclusion that existing moral and social norms should be considered as starting points for the establishment of formal rules because norms are more costly to establish but cheaper to apply.
topic common pool resources
economic experiments
enforcement
institutional interactions
namibia
url https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/307
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