Journal ArticleDOI
A Theory of Access.
Jesse C. Ribot,Nancy Lee Peluso +1 more
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In this article, the authors define access as the ability to derive benefits from things, broadening from property's clas- sical definition as "the right to benefit from things" and examine a broad set of factors that differentiate access from property.Abstract:
The term "access" is frequently used by property and natural resource analysts without adequate definition. In this paper we develop a concept of access and examine a broad set of factors that differentiate access from property. We define access as "the ability to derive benefits from things," broadening from property's clas- sical definition as "the right to benefit from things." Access, following this definition, is more akin to "a bundle of powers" than to property's notion of a "bundle of rights." This formulation includes a wider range of social relationships that constrain or enable benefits from resource use than property relations alone. Using this fram- ing, we suggest a method of access analysis for identifying the constellations of means, relations, and processes that enable various actors to derive benefits from re- sources. Our intent is to enable scholars, planners, and policy makers to empirically "map" dynamic processes and relationships of access.read more
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Book ChapterDOI
Economy and Society
TL;DR: The four Visegrad states (Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary) form a compact area between Germany and Austria in the west and the states of the former USSR in the east as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI
Encountering development: the making and unmaking of the Third World
Journal ArticleDOI
Citizen and subject: contemporary Africa and the legacy of late colonialism
Journal ArticleDOI
Does Adaptive Management of Natural Resources Enhance Resilience to Climate Change
Emma L. Tompkins,W. Neil Adger +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that societies and communities dependent on natural resources need to enhance their capacity to adapt to the impacts of future climate change, particularly when such impacts could lie outside their experienced coping range.
Journal ArticleDOI
New frontiers of land control: Introduction
Nancy Lee Peluso,Christian Lund +1 more
TL;DR: Land questions have invigorated agrarian studies and economic history, with particular emphases on its control, since Marx as mentioned in this paper, since the early 1970s, and have been associated with various forms of accumulation, frontiers, enclosures, territories, grabs, and racialization.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
Shadows in the Forest: Japan and the Politics of Timber in Southeast Asia
Journal ArticleDOI
Non-timber products from tropical forests: evaluation of a conservation and development strategy.
Journal ArticleDOI
The erosion of patron-client bonds and social change in rural southeast Asia
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the effects of social differentiation, the commercialization of subsistence agriculture, and the growth of colonial administration on day-to-day class relations in the countryside.
Book
Shadows in the Forest: Japan and the Politics of Timber in Southeast Asia
TL;DR: In this paper, a model of resource management in client-list states states Japan, patron-client politics, and timber mismanagenement in the outer lands of Indonesia Japan, clientism, and deforestation in East Malaysia Japan, and the collapse of the Philippine timber industry conclusion - Japan's ecological shadow of tropical timber in Southeast Asia.
Book
What Is Property
TL;DR: In this paper, the idea of the just and the unjust and the determination of the principle of government and right is considered as a natural right and labor as the efficient cause of the domain of property.
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