Books and references
1. Berkes, F. (ed.) (1991) Common Property Resources: Ecology and Community-based Sustainable Development. Dehra Dun: International Books Distributors.
2. Ostrom E, Gardner R and Walker J. (eds.) (1994) Rules, games, and common-pool resources, Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
3. Ostrom E. (1990) Governing the commons: The evolution of institutions for collective action, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
4. Hardin, G. (1968). The tragedy of the commons: the population problem has no technical solution; it requires a fundamental extension in morality. Science, 162(3859), 1243-1248.
5. Ostrom, E. (2003) How Types of Goods and Property Rights Jointly Affect Collective Action. Journal of Theoretical Politics 15(3): 239-271.
6. Agrawal, A. (2007) Forests, Governance, and Sustainability: Common Property Theory and its Contributions. International Journal of the Commons, 1(1).
7. Beitl CM. (2012) Shifting policies, access, and the tragedy of enclosures in Ecuadorian mangrove fisheries: towards a political ecology of the commons. Journal of Political Ecology, 19.
8. Zimmerer, K. S. 2006. Cultural ecology: at the interface with political ecology - The new geographies of environmental conservation and globalization. Progress in Human Geography, 30 (1), 63-78
9. Unnikrishnan, Hita, B. Manjunatha, and Harini Nagendra. 2016. Contested Urban Commons: Mapping the Transition of a Lake to a Sports Stadium in Bangalore. International Journal of the Commons 10 (1), 265–93.
10. Baviskar, A. 2018. City Limits: Looking for Environment and Justice in the Urban Context. In Sharachchandra Lele, Eduardo S. Brondizio, John Byrne, Georgina M. Mace, and Joan 4 Martinez-Alier (eds), Rethinking Environmentalism: Linking Justice, Sustainability, and Diversity, pp. 85-97. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
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