Syllabus: GS3/Environment and Conservation
Context
- Delhi hosted a first-of-its-kind dialogue on the conservation, restoration and governance of common resources usually referred to just as Commons.
What are Commons?
- Commons is a term used to refer to resources that are not owned by any individual or group or the government, but belong to, and are shared by, the community as a whole.
- Forests, local ponds, grazing lands, rivers, and sacred sites are all Commons. In the urban setting, parks and lakes are Commons.
- They provide a variety of ecological and other services that are beneficial for the entire community.
- Intangible Commons: Language, folk art or dance, local customs, and traditional knowledge are all shared resources, and thus are Commons.
- At the international level, the polar regions, the Arctic and Antarctica, are considered global Commons.
- Outer space, the Moon, and other planetary bodies are also global Commons.
- In the digital age, most Internet and open-source software are Commons.
- Digital resources with creative commons licences are meant to be used freely by everyone.
- No country is allowed to take ownership of these areas, even though everyone can use them for certain kinds of activities.
Need to Govern Commons
- They need to be maintained, preserved, and used sustainably.
- As these resources are accessible to all, they face a greater threat of over-exploitation and damage.
- Since no one owns Commons, the responsibility of maintenance and upkeep often becomes a problem.
- Commons have also come under increased stress due to climate change.
Governance of Commons
- There are international agreements, for the use and management of polar regions, outer space, and high seas.
- The Paris Agreement on climate change, which seeks to maintain a liveable planet for everyone, is an example.
- In urban areas, municipalities or other structures of local governance take care of the Commons.
- At rural levels, the governance of Commons is often not very well-defined or is non-existent.
- Local communities do get involved but in most cases, lack the resources or the legal sanction to manage these common spaces.
Do you know? – Elinor Ostrom studied with several local communities across the globe and provided plenty of evidence to show that community-led governance structures resulted in more sustainable management of common spaces. – It fetched her a Nobel Prize in Economics in 2009, the first for a woman, culminating in a book titled Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action. – Ostrom’s ideas now form the backbone of the governance structures of Commons in many parts of the world. |
Forest Rights Act and its significance
- In India, the 2006 Forest Rights Act (FRA) is considered a good template for managing common forest resources.
- The Act gives individual and community ownership rights to forest-dwellers to live in and carry out their livelihood in the forest areas.
- The FRA recognised the legal rights of the forest dwellers over the land.
Conclusion
- Nearly one-fourth of India’s landmass, about 205 million acres, is estimated to be Commons, comprising community forests, pastures or water bodies.
- Almost 350 million rural people depend on these Commons for their livelihoods.
- These Commons are estimated to generate economic value worth about Rs 6.6 lakh crore annually, through the provision of goods and ecological services.
- FRA is a good model for forest land but similar frameworks need to be developed for other common resources, particularly areas that are officially classified as wasteland.
Source: IE
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