Litcius/Paper detail

Bundle of Rights Reversed: Anticommons in a Japanese Common Property Forest Due to Legalization

Gakuto Takamura, Takashi Nishide, Yusuke Kanazawa, Masahide Hayashi

2021International Journal of the Commons15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Commons studies have emphasized the importance of customary rights and informal institutions, arguing that if there is a gap between formal ownership titles and customary rights, then the latter must be respected. However, as customary practices weaken, the influence of state legal systems and registered titles becomes stronger. When the commons is registered under multiple co-owners’ names, the commoners come to believe that they hold a normal common property and keep these rights even after they leave the village. This phenomenon, called legalization, leads to the tragedy of the anticommons because the number of rights holders outside the village increases. This paper explains the underuse of Japanese common property forests due to this legalization, especially in terms of two points derived from microdata analysis of the 2000 census. First, in the case of multiple co-owners, the number of ex-villagers who keep their rights is very high. Second, when ex-villagers keep their rights and the registered name includes multiple coowners, forestry activities are most infrequent. This paper names this situation “Bundle of Rights Reversed,” in which those outside the community have strong rights to prevent change in forest use, and propose the application of a different legal rule. This framework would be useful for a comparative study on the formalization of commons tenure rights.

Topics & Concepts

Tragedy of the commonsCommonsLegalizationProperty rightsBundle of rightsCommon-pool resourceBusinessLaw and economicsProperty lawMicrodata (statistics)Common lawPolitical scienceRight to propertyLawEconomicsFundamental rightsHuman rightsCensusSociologyPopulationDemographyMicroeconomicsConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource ManagementForest Management and PolicyLand Rights and Reforms
Bundle of Rights Reversed: Anticommons in a Japanese Common Property Forest Due to Legalization | Litcius