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Rethinking scale in the commons by unsettling old assumptions and asking new scale questions
Abstract
© 2020 The Author(s). Scale is a powerful concept, a lens that shapes how we perceive
problems and solutions in common-pool resource governance. Yet, scale is often treated
as a relatively stable and settled concept in commons scholarship. This paper reviews
the origins and evolution of scalar thinking in commons scholarship in contrast with
theories of scale in human geography and political ecology that focus on scale as
a relational, power-laden process. Beginning with early writings on scale and the
commons, this paper traces the emergence of an explicit scalar epistemology that orders
both spatial and conceptual relationships vertically, as hierarchically nested levels.
This approach to scale underpins a shared conceptualization of common-pool resource
systems but inevitably illuminates certain questions and relationships while simultaneously
obscuring others. Drawing on critiques of commonplace assumptions about scale from
geography, we reread this dominant scalar framework for its analytic limitations and
unintended effects. Drawing on examples from small-scale fisheries governance throughout,
we contrast what is made visible in the commons through the standard approach to scale
against an alternative, process-based approach to scale. We offer a typology of distinct
dimensions and interrelated moments that produce scale in the commons coupled with
new empirical and reflexive scale questions to be explored. We argue that engaging
with theoretical advances on the production of scale in scholarship on the commons
can generate needed attention to power and long-standing blind spots, enlivening our
understanding of the dynamically scaled nature of the commons.
Type
Journal articleSubject
scalecommon-pool resources
human geography
political ecology
power
environmental governance
small-scale fisheries
SSF Guidelines
gender
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22290Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.5334/ijc.1041Publication Info
Smith, H; Basurto, X; Campbell, L; & Lozano, AG (2020). Rethinking scale in the commons by unsettling old assumptions and asking new scale
questions. International Journal of the Commons, 14(1). pp. 714-729. 10.5334/ijc.1041. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22290.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Xavier Basurto
Truman and Nellie Semans/Alex Brown & Sons Associate Professor
I am interested in the fundamental question of how groups (human and non-human) can
find ways to self-organize, cooperate, and engage in successful collective action
for the benefit of the common good. To do this I strive to understand how the institutions
(formal and informal rules and norms) that govern social behavior, interplay with
biophysical variables to shape social-ecological systems. What kind of institutions
are better able to govern complex-adaptive systems? and how can societies (la
Lisa Campbell
Rachel Carson Distinguished Professor of Marine Affairs and Policy
Dr. Campbell studies oceans governance broadly, in relation to diverse issues (blue
economy, blue carbon, protected species, fisheries, MSP, MPAs, tourism, etc.), and
formal and informal processes. She draws on theory from political ecology, political
economy, and science and technology studies to study how science and other values,
the state and non-state actors, inform governance processes and outcomes across geographic
and socio-political scales. She is more generally interested in innovation
Hillary Smith
Research Assistant, Ph D Student
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