Economics, global development,current affairs, globalization, culture and more rants on the dismal science, and the society.
"As usual, it's like being a kid in a candy store. I'm awed by the volume of high-quality daily links in general. Thanks!" - Chris Blattman
In the United States today, democracy means that most people have essentially zero political power, and a relative handful of people have almost unimaginable power. The central point of Unchecked and Unbalanced is to call attention to the extreme political inequality that has emerged in the United States, particularly over the past fifty years.
In the south Asian context, the key contribution by Elinor Ostrom, along with other scholars (Shivakoti and Ostrom 2002) has been to provide effective empirical understanding of the performance of different types of irrigation institutional arrangements, along with a theoretical understanding of how these systems work. She demonstrated the importance of involving farmer-users in the design and management of irrigation systems for successful local resource management policies in Nepal. Work in Asia had amply demonstrated that large, centralised and essentially top-down government management systems tended to underperform, with lower rates of return on investment than systems where incentives to engineers were aligned to those of local farmer-users with their active participation (Wade 1982; Lam 1995; Ostrom 2002). Several Indian scholars have been inspired by Ostrom’s work to study issues of collective action and governance of common property resources, and to search for alternative frameworks for understanding how best to manage such resources which are often vital to the very existence of rural livelihoods in India. A large body of literature exists in India on the contributions of common property resources or CPRs as they are commonly labelled. The National Sample Survey too devoted a special round (54th round) to the de jure and de facto existence and contributions of CPRs in India, particularly in terms of their provisioning services such as fuel-wood, fodder and non-timber forest products from forests. Her work and that following hers in south Asia and elsewhere has found that institutions for collective action can emerge in rural societies characterised by inequality, prior history and poor implementation of centrally determined legal structures. Village society was often able to accept some amount of inequality, overlook prior history and agree on common norms of behaviour to solve the problems of the commons.
Several scholars from south Asia benefited from visiting the “Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis”, which Ostrom established in 1973, along with her husband Vincent, a political scientist at the Indiana University Bloomington. Over time, the Workshop has turned out to be an extraordinary forum for productive deliberations from evolving associations of students and professors thereby producing a wealth of theory, empirical studies and experiments at the interface of political economy, social anthropology, economics, political science, and policy studies thereby further enriching the interdisciplinary discourse of collective action. Quite a few of the research students of Ostrom have visited Indian institutes (Institute of Economic Growth (IEG) in Delhi, being one of the prominent ones) and have worked with Indian scholars, thereby resulting in further exchanges. Ostrom herself has visited academic institutions in India a few times, the most recent visit being at the IEG in October 2008, providing the researchers the intellectual space to discuss and debate design issues in moving from models of governance of local to global commons.
Her important book that was key to her prize, Governing the Commons, 1990, has been riduculed because presumably unlike an article in the AER, it did not go through a "peer review" process
To see the world more like Elinor Ostrom is to be guided less by ideology and more by the contours of the situation — to use the right institutional tool for the job. “[N]ational governments,” Ostrom tells us, “are too small to govern the global commons and too big to handle smaller scale problems.”
To understand BOTH why we don’t need police officers in some cases AND why police officers don’t follow the rules in other cases, we have to expand models of human preferences to include a contingent taste for punishing others. In reaching this conclusion, she arrived at a point similar to that reached by Avner Greif (whom the Nobel committee correctly cites.)
A powerful thinker, Mr. Lévi-Strauss, in studying the mythologies of primitive tribes, transformed the way the 20th century came to understand civilization itself. Tribal mythologies, he argued, display remarkably subtle systems of logic, showing rational mental qualities as sophisticated as those of Western societies.
Mr. Lévi-Strauss rejected the idea that differences between societies were of no consequence, but he focused on the common aspects of humanity’s attempts to understand the world. He became the premier representative of “structuralism,” a school of thought in which universal “structures” were believed to underlie all human activity, giving shape to seemingly disparate cultures and creations.
His work was a profound influence even on his critics, of whom there were many. There has been no comparable successor to him in France. And his writing — a mixture of the pedantic and the poetic, full of daring juxtapositions, intricate argument and elaborate metaphors — resembles little that had come before in anthropology.
...With the fading of myth’s power in the modern West, he also suggested that music had taken on myth’s function. Music, he argued, had the ability to suggest, with primal narrative power, the conflicting forces and ideas that lie at the foundation of society.
But Mr. Lévi-Strauss rejected Rousseau’s idea that humankind’s problems derive from society’s distortions of nature. In his view, there is no alternative to such distortions. Each society must shape itself out of nature’s raw material, he believed, with law and reason as the essential tools. This application of reason, he argued, created universals that could be found across all cultures and times. He became known as a structuralist because of his conviction that a structural unity underlies all of humanity’s mythmaking, and he showed how those universal motifs played out in societies, even in the ways a village was laid out.
For Mr. Lévi-Strauss, every culture’s mythology was built around oppositions: hot and cold, raw and cooked, animal and human. And it is through these opposing “binary” concepts, he said, that humanity makes sense of the world.
Lana Del Rey Trumps Her Critics
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The singer-songwriter Lana Del Rey's debut album opens at No. 2 despite
complaints about her name, her songwriting and her lips.
Gingrich Warns of Iranian Nuclear Attack on U.S.
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Mr. Gingrich's comments were the latest in a string of hawkish and even
apocalyptic statements that have been used in discussing Iran by some
Republican pr...
More about adjuncts
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So my first month as president of the Modern Language Association (MLA) has
turned out to be surprisingly eventful. After receiving my very own gavel
with ...
World War II Rumor About an Ancient Lake Is Revived
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With Russian scientists poised to take some samples from a deep subglacial
lake in Antarctica, outlandish theories persist about what may be
discovered -- ...
Santorum Surge, Part 144
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Let's ignore that three of his four wins (including two last night) have
come in non-binding caucuses and take a quick look at The Size of the
Santorum Sur...
In Piracy Debate, Deciding if the Sky Is Falling
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Media and Internet giants at odds over dealing with stolen content on the
Web may need to agree first on exactly how bad the problem is, Jenna
Wortham and ...
Don't Pull a Tucker Carlson
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Charles Murray wrote a much-discussed new book, *Coming Apart: The State of
White America, 1960-2010*.
David Frum quotes Murray as writing, in an echo o...
Pg. 99: Michael Cannell's "The Limit"
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The current feature at the Page 99 Test: The Limit: Life and Death on the 1961 Grand Prix Circuit by Michael T. Cannell.
About the book, from the publisher:...
Even death won't stop prosecution of Russian lawyer
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In a move straight out of Kafka, Russian police are taking the unusual step
of filing new tax evasion charges against lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who died
...
“Financial Stability” Analysis in Bank M&A
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*Editor’s Note:* H. Rodgin Cohen is a partner and senior chairman of
Sullivan & Cromwell LLP focusing on acquisition, corporate governance,
regulatory and ...
The power of management
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My scepticism about the effectiveness of management has been challenged by Luis Enrique, who directs me to research by Nick Bloom and colleagues. But his wor...
Why Agile Fails: Sometimes It’s the People
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You’ve read the books, analyzed the options, and gotten team agreement, yet
you’re still having issues switching to agile business practices. What’s
going ...
Stats and Bayesian econometrics resources
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The Foundations of Statistics: A Simulation-based Approach. Nice intro to R
too.
A course in Bayesian Econometrics, by Gary Koop.
Does Foot Form Explain Running Injuries?
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Researchers combed through four years' worth of data about Harvard runners
to produce the surprisingly controversial finding that how a person runs
may aff...
Larry Page’s “Tidal Wave Moment”?
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Who remembers the moment, back in 1995, when Bill Gates wrote his famous
Internet Tidal Wave Memo? In it he rallied his entire organization to the
cause of...
Fat Chance Saloon: Japan Joining the TPP PTA
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This WSJ headline is somewhat misleading: the US government would dearly
love Japan to join its effort to expand the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
and in...
Why are there so few vaccine suppliers?
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In many cases, only a handful of suppliers produce vaccines for a given
disease. In fact, for several vaccine types the U.S. has fewer suppliers
than coun...
Monday Message Board
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It’s time for another Monday Message Board. Post comments on any topic. As
usual, civilised discussion and no coarse language. Lengthy side
discussions to ...
Employment: Some good news, some bad news
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Comparisons can be useful in determining where the economy is at any given point in time, and today's Employment Situation report from the U.S. Bureau of Lab...
Physician-Assisted Suicide—Posner
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Medical science has made and is continuing to make rapid advances in extending longevity. But frequently the extensions involve prolonging miserable lives wi...
Rooster parenting?
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Last year we had the Tiger mother and the Lemur father. For this year's
instalment, we turn to France and an article published in the *Wall Street
Journal...
goCognitive 2.0
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We’ve reported before on the Univeristy of Idaho’s goCognitive project.
It’s a enticing collection of videos and demonstrations, including many
guest spots...
Pre-pay Motorola Razor
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So, what are you waiting for? Motorola Bluetooth offers headsets, adaptors,
stereo headsets and wearable technology and the pre-pay motorola razor and
ef...
The Ride on Washington
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On March 16 and 17th, during what I can only imagine to be a spell of
unseasonably balmy weather in the Northeast, I will be riding with
cyclocross champio...
Getting Incentives Right
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In September 2010, a natural gas pipeline owned by Pacific Gas & Electric
company (PG&E) ruptured in a subdivision of San Bruno, California, starting
a fir...
Brzezinski on Execution of the Asia "Pivot"
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Just by way of a quick follow up regarding the post immediately below, I did want to post this snippet from last weekend's "Lunch with the FT" feature, with ...
Good Text Book on Public Policy
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Section I: What Is Public Policy? Chapter 1: Public Decision Making
Chapter 2: Why Is It So Hard to Make the World a Better Place?
Sectio...
Spherical Waves and the Hairy Ball Theorem
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Boy howdy do we love spheres in physics. Sure we might tell you that the
reason involves deep truths in topology, and symmetry, and group theory,
and all...
Google Plus – Innovators and Early Adopters
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On June 28, 2011, Google+ launched with a limited, invitation-only beta.
Now, nearly a month and half later and a less restrictive invitation
policy, what ...
Annual semi-data-driven favorite songs list: 2011
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It’s time once more to take a semi-data-driven look back at my 10 favorite
songs of the year just ended. (I have previously conducted this
empirical/subjec...
this site is moving
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After more than eight years at this address and more than more than seven years blogging with the same old version of MovableType software, I am shifting ove...
A Conversation about Gasoline Prices
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According to yesterday’s weekly federal report, This Week in Petroleum, the
average price of regular gasoline is up to $3.96 per gallon, just 15 cents
shy ...
Behavioural Economics and Irish Public Policy
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posted the following on irisheconomy.ie
I have posted a few times (here and here) before on developments in the
micro-side of behavioural economics. I thin...
Gobal Civil Society in the making
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by Johannes Staemmler The number of internationally operating NGOs has
risen drastically over the last years. They are to some extent an indicator
for what...
Moving Day for This Blog: Thanks for Everything!
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In August, 2007, the Freakonomics blog took up residence on NYTimes.com. It
has been a great ride. But now we are riding off, back to an independent
Freako...
U-verse app delivers TV to smartphones
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‘Place-shifting’ technology, pioneered by companies like Sling Media with
its SlingBox and SlingPlayer Mobile service, has proved popular with
consumers bu...
An Announcement
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Michael Blowhard writes: Dear Friends -- You imagine it can't happen to
you, and then it does. Here's why 2Blowhards disappeared: Our webhost,
who'd given ...
Goodbye Scienceblogs
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NOTE: This blog has moved. The Frontal Cortex is now over here.
I've got some exciting news: Starting today, the Frontal Cortex will be
moving over to th...
Armenian genetics
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Armenian genes: Scientist in Yerevan launches a project to reveal genetic
history of the nation. The description of the science in the piece is *very*garble...
New site
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I have a new site at *WordPress*:
http://www.harryrclarke.com/
*Readers please adjust your browser settings. *
**
It is goodbye *Blogger* for at least a wh...
Re-opening for business (in one form or another)
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by Conor Clarke Hi again, and sorry for the publishing hiatus. The Creative Capitalism book is now done. It comes out December 2 -- "just in time for the hol...
Now also with non-English blogs
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Now that I have figured out how to make the welcome message stick at the
top, I will also post from time to time about additions. For the moment, I
have ad...
The Noisy Game of Baseball
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By Julie J. Rehmeyer Halfway through the 2005 baseball season, John Olerud was having a great year with the Boston Red Sox. His batting average was .405, far...