Rangeland Use Rights Privatisation Based on the Tragedy of the Commons: A Case Study from Tibet

Rangeland use rights privatisation based on a tragedy of the commons assumption has been the backbone of state policy on rangeland management and pastoralism in China. Through an empirical case study from Pelgon county, Tibet Autonomous Region in China, this paper provides an empirical analysis of r...

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Main Author: Yonten Nyima Yundannima
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2017-01-01
Series:Conservation & Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2017;volume=15;issue=3;spage=270;epage=279;aulast=Yundannima
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spelling doaj-444fdf98a3744c37ab2e1431458b7c392020-11-24T23:20:37ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsConservation & Society0972-49232017-01-0115327027910.4103/cs.cs_15_118Rangeland Use Rights Privatisation Based on the Tragedy of the Commons: A Case Study from TibetYonten Nyima YundannimaRangeland use rights privatisation based on a tragedy of the commons assumption has been the backbone of state policy on rangeland management and pastoralism in China. Through an empirical case study from Pelgon county, Tibet Autonomous Region in China, this paper provides an empirical analysis of rangeland use rights privatisation. It shows that the tragedy of the commons is not the correct model to apply to Tibetan pastoralism because pasture use in Tibet has never been an open-access institution. Thus, when the tragedy of the commons model is applied as a rationale for rangeland use rights privatisation, the result is not what is intended by the policy, but rather a misfit to features of pastoralism and thus disruption of the essence of pastoralism, i.e. mobility and flexibility. The paper further shows that a hybrid institution combining household rangeland tenure with community-based use with user fees is a restoration of the pastoralist institution. This demonstrates the capacity of pastoralists to create adaptive new institutions congruent with the interdependent and integrated nature of pastoralism consisting of three components: pastoralists, livestock, and rangeland.http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2017;volume=15;issue=3;spage=270;epage=279;aulast=YundannimaRangeland use rightstragedy of the commonsTibetPelgon countypastoralismChina
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yonten Nyima Yundannima
spellingShingle Yonten Nyima Yundannima
Rangeland Use Rights Privatisation Based on the Tragedy of the Commons: A Case Study from Tibet
Conservation & Society
Rangeland use rights
tragedy of the commons
Tibet
Pelgon county
pastoralism
China
author_facet Yonten Nyima Yundannima
author_sort Yonten Nyima Yundannima
title Rangeland Use Rights Privatisation Based on the Tragedy of the Commons: A Case Study from Tibet
title_short Rangeland Use Rights Privatisation Based on the Tragedy of the Commons: A Case Study from Tibet
title_full Rangeland Use Rights Privatisation Based on the Tragedy of the Commons: A Case Study from Tibet
title_fullStr Rangeland Use Rights Privatisation Based on the Tragedy of the Commons: A Case Study from Tibet
title_full_unstemmed Rangeland Use Rights Privatisation Based on the Tragedy of the Commons: A Case Study from Tibet
title_sort rangeland use rights privatisation based on the tragedy of the commons: a case study from tibet
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Conservation & Society
issn 0972-4923
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Rangeland use rights privatisation based on a tragedy of the commons assumption has been the backbone of state policy on rangeland management and pastoralism in China. Through an empirical case study from Pelgon county, Tibet Autonomous Region in China, this paper provides an empirical analysis of rangeland use rights privatisation. It shows that the tragedy of the commons is not the correct model to apply to Tibetan pastoralism because pasture use in Tibet has never been an open-access institution. Thus, when the tragedy of the commons model is applied as a rationale for rangeland use rights privatisation, the result is not what is intended by the policy, but rather a misfit to features of pastoralism and thus disruption of the essence of pastoralism, i.e. mobility and flexibility. The paper further shows that a hybrid institution combining household rangeland tenure with community-based use with user fees is a restoration of the pastoralist institution. This demonstrates the capacity of pastoralists to create adaptive new institutions congruent with the interdependent and integrated nature of pastoralism consisting of three components: pastoralists, livestock, and rangeland.
topic Rangeland use rights
tragedy of the commons
Tibet
Pelgon county
pastoralism
China
url http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2017;volume=15;issue=3;spage=270;epage=279;aulast=Yundannima
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