Cárdenas, J.Stranlund, J.Willis, C.2016-04-192016-04-1920011-59111-009-2http://hdl.handle.net/10919/65440Metadata only recordStrategies that integrate conservation and development are especially critical in regions where ecosystems provide direct and indirect benefits for local users and others, and where because of institutional conditions there is a commons dilemma. State intervention is sometimes thought necessary and desirable to correct the externalities arising from the conflict between short-term needs to extract a resource from the common-pool and the long-term need for preserving the ecosystem for its renewability and its capacity to provide other indirect ecological services.application/pdfen-USIn CopyrightSocial impactsCommunity institutionsSustainable developmentCommunity managementResource lawEnvironmental impactsGovernment policyLaws and regulationsConservationEconomic modeling and analysisEconomic impactsGovernmentLocal commonsCommon-pool resourcesEconomic payoffSelf-governing institutionsEcosystem GovernanceShould the state regulate the local commons? Lessons from economic experiments in the fieldBookCopyright 2001 by SANREM CRSP and CARE-SUBIR. All rights reserved