Facilitated self-governance of the commons on the roles of civil society organizations in the governance of shared resource systems

Publication date

2019

Authors

van Laerhoven, FrankORCID 0000-0003-4282-7383ISNI 0000000038905412
Barnes, Clare

Editors

Hudson, Blake
Rosenbloom, Jonathan
Cole, Dan

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

We observe that the common pool resource (CPR), or commons, 2 literature in general seems to focus on a particular form of governance – i.e. pure self-governance – that in reality seldom exists. There is a tension between theorizing in the CPR literature, which often implicitly assumes communities make decisions about their resources in isolation from other actors, and the presence of outsiders, or external actors, who present themselves to communities with the aim of supporting their self-governance efforts. In this chapter we frame this tension as a shortcoming in the CPR literature, which leaves unanswered important questions regarding the presence of outsiders, such as “How can outsiders, and civil society organizations (CSOs) in particular, support local communities in developing forms of self-governance that lead to sustainable outcomes for both resource systems and local livelihoods?” or “Can self-governance be facilitated, and if so, how?”.

Keywords

Taverne, General Social Sciences

Citation

Van Laerhoven, F & Barnes, C 2019, Facilitated self-governance of the commons on the roles of civil society organizations in the governance of shared resource systems. in B Hudson, J Rosenbloom & D Cole (eds), Routledge Handbook of the Study of the Commons. Taylor & Francis, pp. 360-375. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315162782-27