This insight episode comes from full episode eighty-four with Mark Moritz.
Mark is a professor of anthropology at the Ohio State University who has studied pastoralist communities around the world.
Mark talks with Michael about his interpretation of open property regimes as an adaptation to resource scarcity and vulnerability in pastoralist systems, specifically discussing the Pashtun system in Afghanistan and his research in Cameroon to illustrate his interpretation, and the different understanding of rights in these communities.
Mark’s website: https://anthropology.osu.edu/people/moritz.42
Moritz, M. (2016). Open property regimes. International Journal of the Commons, 10(2), 688.
Moritz, M., et al. 2018. Emergent Sustainability in Open Property Regimes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 115 (51): 12859–67.
009: Games and experiments with Juan Camilo Cárdenas
008: A history of the oceans and the importance of taking a historical research perspective with Helen Rozwadowski
007: Evidence synthesis and systematic literature review methodologies with Neal Haddaway
006: Sustainable tourism, hotel certifications and balancing academic tasks with Sonya Graci
005: Ecosystem services, justice, leverage points and land-sparing vs. land-sharing with David Abson
004: A history of sustainability, changing academia and teaching with Jeremy Caradonna
003: Methods, philosophy and sustainability science with Henrik von Wehrden
002: Interdisciplinarity and the Marine Social Science Network with Emma McKinley
001: Podcast introduction and discussion with Michael Cox
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