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Revisiting the Role of Institutions in Transformative Contexts: Institutional Change and Conflicts

Dimitrios Zikos

2020Sustainability18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The study of conflicts over natural resources is neither governed by a coherent set of theories nor limited by strict disciplinary boundaries. Rather, it encompasses a multitude of conceptions grounded within a wide array of disciplines and epistemological assumptions concerning the links between institutional change and conflicts, often concluding in contradictory propositions. This article aims at providing conceptual guidance for the special issue, by reviewing institutional research with a particular focus on institutional change and associated conflicts and drawing some implications from transformative settings. More specifically, the paper explores certain propositions and concepts utilised by institutional economists to explain why conflicts persist despite institutional reforms explicitly or implicitly introduced to resolve them. The author revisits diverse cases from different regions to investigate key concepts related to institutional change and its implications on environmental conflicts associated to transformations, complementing this view from a political science perspective. The paper concludes by offering an overview of factors identified as instrumental in understanding the institutional change and conflict–cooperation continuum.

Topics & Concepts

Transformative learningMultitudeDisciplinePoliticsSociologyEpistemologyPerspective (graphical)Institutional changeSet (abstract data type)Political sciencePositive economicsSocial sciencePublic administrationLawEconomicsPhilosophyPedagogyArtificial intelligenceProgramming languageComputer scienceConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource ManagementNatural Resources and Economic DevelopmentClimate Change Policy and Economics
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