Using common-pool resource principles to design local government
By: Tang, Shui-Yan.
Contributor(s): Pisano, Mark and Callahan.
Material type:
ArticlePublisher: 2014Description: p.791-803.Subject(s): Local government
In:
Public Administration ReviewSummary: This article analyzes local government fiscal sustainability as a common-pool resource (CPR) problem. Comparing the experiences of Los Angeles County, San Bernardino City, and San Bernardino County, California, the analysis applies a framework developed from three decades of CPR research to show the importance of six micro-situational variablesラcommunications with the full set of participants, known reputations of participants, high marginal per capita return, entry or exit capabilities, longer time horizon, and agreed-upon sanctioning capabilitiesラin shaping collective action dynamics and building the trust and reciprocity among stakeholders needed to achieve fiscal sustainability. The underlying contextual conditions for these micro-situational variables vary based on specific socioeconomic and political settings, but the findings suggest that institutions and processes can be designed based on several well-tested principles in CPR governance to encourage stakeholders to look beyond their immediate self-interests and make decisions that account for the community's long-term fiscal sustainability. - Reprodu
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Indian Institute of Public Administration | Volume no: 74, Issue no: 6 | Available | AR107138 |
This article analyzes local government fiscal sustainability as a common-pool resource (CPR) problem. Comparing the experiences of Los Angeles County, San Bernardino City, and San Bernardino County, California, the analysis applies a framework developed from three decades of CPR research to show the importance of six micro-situational variablesラcommunications with the full set of participants, known reputations of participants, high marginal per capita return, entry or exit capabilities, longer time horizon, and agreed-upon sanctioning capabilitiesラin shaping collective action dynamics and building the trust and reciprocity among stakeholders needed to achieve fiscal sustainability. The underlying contextual conditions for these micro-situational variables vary based on specific socioeconomic and political settings, but the findings suggest that institutions and processes can be designed based on several well-tested principles in CPR governance to encourage stakeholders to look beyond their immediate self-interests and make decisions that account for the community's long-term fiscal sustainability. - Reprodu


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