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The Past Half Century - Many Efforts to Jump Start Development Processes. Many Panacea's RecommendedCentralize to insure building one nationInvest in physical infrastructureCreate Integrated Rural DevelopmentsSell off State Owned EnterprisesDecentralize to reduce public sector. After Large Sum
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1. Polycentric Institutions: Blending Local and Global Knowledge Elinor Ostrom
Indiana University
2. The Past Half Century - Many Efforts to Jump Start Development Processes Many Panaceas Recommended
Centralize to insure building one nation
Invest in physical infrastructure
Create Integrated Rural Developments
Sell off State Owned Enterprises
Decentralize to reduce public sector
3. After Large Sums of Development Assistance Many authoritarian regimes
Multiple civil wars or armed rebellions
Reduction of food sufficiency in some countries
Poverty has remained constant or worsened in many countries
Some notable successes, but not the average
4. Policies Based on Recommendations by Social Scientists Need serious re-thinking of our foundations
Tend to think too often in dichotomies
market versus state
centralization versus decentralization
Recent theoretical and empirical research forms a foundation for better policy advice
5. The Importance of the Global Development Network An ongoing forum for discussion about important institutional issues
Given scholars from multiple countries and disciplines, one can:
Analyze more complex problems
Develop ways of blending local and global knowledge
Help to design more effective policies
6. Lets Focus on Natural Resources Policies to nationalize all forests in developing countries during 1960s to 1990s
Led to counter-productive outcomes
National governments unable to exercise their ownership rights
Recent policies to hand-over irrigation systems and forests
Lack a firm theoretical or empirical foundation
Led to further resource deterioration
7. Why? Tragedy of the Commons Theory dominated early policy analysis
Led to failed centralization policies
Evidence that users could self-organize (with firm ownership, autonomy, and sufficient time) misunderstood
A large gap between policy and recent empirical research on common-pool resources
8. Experiments in the Lab and in the Field Provide Strong Evidence Without communication, tragedy of commons theory is supported
With communication (and with other institutional mechanisms) the theory is not supported
much higher levels of cooperation than predicted
a demonstrated capacity to self-organize without external enforcers
9. Field Experiments in Colombia Conducted by Cardenas prize winning paper at last years conference
Same general patterns as lab experiments in the U.S., Canada, and Europe
More variance some groups much less likely to cooperate especially when greater heterogeneity of assets present
10. How Do Local Users Self-Organize to Draw on Local Knowledge? Consensus now exists about:
the attributes of a resource
the attributes of users
Affecting costs and benefits of self-organization.
11. Self-organization More Likely When Resource Is: Scarce but not exhausted
Moderately predictable
Moderate sized
Generates reliable information
Local knowledge can be quite reliable in such settings
12. Attributes of Users Conducive to Self-organization View resource as highly salient
Have a low discount rate
Developed trust and reciprocity
Have autonomy to determine some rules
Have prior organizational experience (social capital) and local leaders
Share common understanding about resource
13. Theoretical and Empirical Debates over: Size of group
Heterogeneity of groups
Neither seem to have as strong an effect as previously thought.
Depends on ingenuity of users to devise institutions to deal effective with size and heterogeneity
14. Theoretical Synthesis of Empirical Findings Self-governance is costly
time and effort to devise new rules and organization
cost of monitoring and enforcement
These costs must be LOWER than benefits to be derived
Attributes of resource and users affect both benefits and costs
15. Self-Organization Occurs When Benefits > Costs for: Local, minimal winning coalition
may be based on consensus
may be a majority
may be a single local leader
16. Rules Devised by Self-Organized Regimes Differ in important ways from current text book remedies
Frequently do not regulate quantity
Regulate time, space, and technology
Rules tend to encourage growth of trust and reciprocity
Rules based on unique aspects of a local resource
17. Importance of Larger Regimes Can provide needed scientific knowledge to complement local knowledge
Attributes affect by larger regime
Without secure ownership rights, users will have high discount rates
If resource already degraded, benefits of organization will not occur for long time
18. Larger Regimes Can Facilitate Local Self-organization by Providing: accurate information,
conflict resolution arenas,
effective technical assistance,
mechanisms to back up local monitoring and sanctioning efforts.
19. Donor Assisted Hand-Over Projects Not based on empirically grounded theory
Return mostly degraded resources -- where are the benefits?
Retain government ownership -- where is the autonomy?
Where are the long-term interests?
Expect users to perform rapidly what government agencies have failed to do
20. Failure of Hand-over Projects Not a good test of capabilities of local users
Too simplistic a view of how best to organize local governance
One layer views of the world -- either centralized or decentralized -- not an adequate foundation for democratic institutions.
21. Autonomous Local Resource Governance Regimes Can Achieve: better tailored rules using local knowledge
lower enforcement costs
increase in trust and reciprocity
lowered risk through redundancy
22. Limits of Fully Decentralized Systems: Failure to organize in some localities
Local tyrannies
Stagnation
Inappropriate discrimination
Limited access to scientific information
Conflict among groups
Inability to cope with large-scale problems
23. Importance of Polycentric Systems Governance systems that exist at multiple levels with some autonomy at each level
Retains many benefits of local level systems
Adds overlapping units to help overcome limits
Frequently ill-labeled as chaotic and inefficient in academic literature
24. Polycentric Systems are Complex Adaptive Systems Social scientists face a major challenge
to understand complex adaptive systems (CAS)
to develop policies to improve the performance of CAS
to integrate theories at multiple levels of analysis
to use agent-based models to complement game theory
to critique use of simple panaceas
25. Understanding Complexity The challenge for social science for the next millennium
When can complexity be simplified and performance improved
When does simplification reduce
Essential redundancy
Institutional robustness
26. Global Development Network Will play a key role in this essential work
Thank you for inviting me to share some of my reflections on the relationship between local and global knowledge