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Informationen zum Autor Alex Smajgl has a PhD in Environmental Economics. Currently he works for the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) and its Division Sustainable Ecosystems and develops multi-scale decision support tools for policy-makers in Australia and Indonesia in the context of climate change! water quantity and water quality issues! and land use change. Prior to this position he worked for European stakeholders on the implementation of an emissions trading scheme in the Post-Kyoto negotiations. Silva Larson is a Chartered Environmentalist (UK) and works for CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems. Her main research interest is in human perceptions and wellbeing! and the role they play in strategic environmental assessment and social responsibility reporting. Zusammenfassung The way that humans organize both resource access and resource use is vital to the management of natural resources. This book examines institutional dynamics from the perspective of natural resource management. It analyses institutional misfit with a focus on the long-term impacts of colonial structures in the Asia-Pacific region. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface * Part I: The Context * Institutional Dynamics and Natural Resource Management * Part II: Institutional Diversity and Contextual Change * Multiple Institutions for Multiple Outcomes * The Challenge of Maintaining the Salience of Common Property Rights with Increasing Cultural and Socio-economic Heterogeneity * Part III: Institutional Misfit * Traditional and Customary Land Tenure and Appurtenant Rights: Reflections on Critical Factors of an Ecologically Sustainable Australian Outback * Substantive and Procedural Dimensions of Old and New Forms of Property: IPRs! the CBD and the Protection of Traditional Ecological Knowledge * Myth! Embeddedness and Tradition: Property Rights Perceptions from the Pacific * Indigenous Property Right to Water: Environmental Flows! Cultural Values and Tradeable Property Rights * Commercial Forestry: An Economic Development Opportunity Consistent with the Property Rights of Wik People to Natural Resources * Coping with a Tragedy of the Australian Aboriginal Common * Part IV: Experiences in Dealing with Institutional Dynamics * Designing Robust Common Property Regimes for Collaboration towards Rural Sustainability * The Need to Consider the Administration of Property Rights and Restrictions before Creating them * Building Institutional Incentives in Dying Communities * The Potential for Market Mechanisms to Achieve Vegetation Protection in the Desert Uplands * A Metaphysical Grounding for Ecologically Sustainable Property Rights * Index ...