2020
DOI: 10.5334/ijc.983
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Ostrom, Floods and Mismatched Property Rights

Abstract: How societies can cope with flood risk along coasts and riverbanks is a critical theoretical and empirical problem-particularly in the wake of anthropogenic climate change and the increased severity of floods. An example of this challenge is the growing costs of publicly-funded flood defense in Britain and popular outcries during the regular occasions that the British government fails to protect property and land during heavy rains. Traditional approaches to institutional analysis suggest that flood management… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…However, due to the spatial aspect of flooding, those who live within the boundaries of the “benefit area” but who did not seek to benefit from the flood measure have “little incentive to engage” (Geaves & Penning‐Rowsell, 2016). For these reasons, some have argued that flood management can be better understood as a common pool resource, meaning that flooding mitigation is a shared resource that is ‘rival’ because floodwater can be channelled from one area to another and ‘subtractable’ because freeriding or benefitting from flood management without contributing to it leaves more water for others to deal with (Cowen & Delmotte, 2020; Ostrom, 1990; Ostrom, 2010). Our results support this framing of flood management as a common pool resource.
Now we've been requesting for the soil truck to deploy another soil deployment here so we can continue with the land fill.
…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, due to the spatial aspect of flooding, those who live within the boundaries of the “benefit area” but who did not seek to benefit from the flood measure have “little incentive to engage” (Geaves & Penning‐Rowsell, 2016). For these reasons, some have argued that flood management can be better understood as a common pool resource, meaning that flooding mitigation is a shared resource that is ‘rival’ because floodwater can be channelled from one area to another and ‘subtractable’ because freeriding or benefitting from flood management without contributing to it leaves more water for others to deal with (Cowen & Delmotte, 2020; Ostrom, 1990; Ostrom, 2010). Our results support this framing of flood management as a common pool resource.
Now we've been requesting for the soil truck to deploy another soil deployment here so we can continue with the land fill.
…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An interdisciplinary group of scientists, economists, political scientists, and legal scholars have since begun re-defining property as an overlapping set of resources and associated rights. (Lueck 2018, Leonard and Parker 2019, Facemire and Bradshaw 2020, Cowen and Delmotte 2020. Yandle (2007) coined the term "mismatched property rights" in her exploration of overlapping rights regimes in New Zealand's Fisheries.…”
Section: A Motivationmentioning
confidence: 99%