![]() ![]() This wiki is intended to be a collaborative repository to share codebooks and other sources of variables, to improve interdisciplinary vocabulary, and to enable comparative research. A single case can be explored through different frameworks, etc., and two cases can be viewed through a single framework - but only if tools for such comparisons are available. Most of the frameworks and theories, and many of the models and codebooks, that have been used in this scholarly tradition are not sector-specific, though there are sector-specific databases (see below). Coding this data inductively also results in additional variables that may or may not fit within a pre-existing framework. Researchers on the commons, following in this scholarly tradition, have coded data from games, experiments, surveys and literature according to variables described in various frameworks and theories. ![]() This wiki builds upon the work of Elinor Ostrom, Edella Schlager, and Shui Yan Tang - who, in 1987, created the original common pool resource (CPR) coding database which has become a part of the Social-Ecological Systems (SES) Library. It can be used and improved by researchers, students, and practitioners engaged in the analysis of social-ecological systems or other coupled infrastructure systems to improve our collective understanding. Welcome! This wiki exists to help researchers learn from others and compare approaches to their research on the commons. If you're visiting this wiki for the first time. ![]()
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