This book offers an analytical explanation for the origins of and change in property institutions on the American frontier during the nineteenth century. Its scope is interdisciplinary, integrating insights from political science, economics, law, and history. This book shows how claim clubs informal governments established by squatters in each of the major frontier sectors of agriculture, mining, logging, and ranching substituted for the state as a source of private property institutions and how they changed the course of who received a legal title, and for what price, throughout the...
This book offers an analytical explanation for the origins of and change in property institutions on the American frontier during the nineteenth centu...
Meina Cai Ilia Murtazashvili Jennifer Brick Murtazash
Since Garrett Hardin published 'The Tragedy of the Commons' in 1968, critics have argued that population growth and capitalism contribute to overuse of natural resources and degradation of the global environment. They propose coercive, state-centric solutions. This book offers an alternative view. Employing insights from new institutional economics, the authors argue that property rights, competitive markets, polycentric political institutions, and social institutions such as trust, patience and individualism enable society to conserve natural resources and mitigate harms to the global...
Since Garrett Hardin published 'The Tragedy of the Commons' in 1968, critics have argued that population growth and capitalism contribute to overuse o...