Words to Know

Tragedy of the Commons

A term used to illustrate the conflict between individual interests and the common good, based on the assumption that when individuals use a public good, they do not consider the impact – or externalities – of their use on the good itself; as a result, public resources become overexploited. The term was popularized by Garrett Hardin in his 1968 Science article “The Tragedy of the Commons,” which used a hypothetical example of English Commons, shared plots of grassland used by all livestock farmers in a village. In this hypothetical, each farmer keeps adding more livestock to graze on the Commons, because it costs him nothing to do so. In a few years, the soil is depleted by overgrazing, the Commons becomes unusable, and the village perishes.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

 

Word of the day

Stakeholder

Any person or group who has an interest (a stake) in an organization, a community, or design project.

Broaden your vocabulary and add your own terms in Words to Know.

Want to add a term?

As the sustainability conversation grows, so does its lexicon. We welcome your additions and requests for definitions.

Note: our editors review all resource submissions before posting.

Submit a term

X

Already registered?
Please sign in.

Forgot your password or username?

Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a new password via email.

Cancel