Showing 441 - 460 results of 1,075 for search 'Ostróda~', query time: 2.30s Refine Results
  1. 441
  2. 442
  3. 443

    Les bénéfices sociaux et environnementaux des systèmes agricoles : une analyse ostromienne de trois terrains d’étude en France by Marielle Berriet-Solliec, Christophe Déprés, Colas Chervier, François-Gaël Lataste, Denis Lépicier, Hai Vu Pham, Virginie Piguet

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…This article uses the Ostrom’s notion of socio-ecological system in order to characterize agricultural practices generating social and environmental benefits and to identify factors that ease or limit their implementation. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  4. 444

    L’ambivalence des communs by Gilles Allaire

    Published 2019-04-01
    “…We qualify as intangible this dimension, shared by material, and more widely, types of common-pool resources, and we relate it to the concept of intangible property introduced by J. R. Commons. The Ostrom’s concept of commons has several facets. It is not only a system of resources (« common-pool resources »), but also a property regime and more widely a type of complex institutional arrangement, as well as the justifications given for it. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  5. 445

    Open-Source Urbanism: Creating, Multiplying and Managing Urban Commons by Karin Bradley

    Published 2015-06-01
    “…Although this tradition of ‘commoning’ is not new, it is currently being reinvented with the use of digital technologies. Combining Elinor Ostrom’s analysis of self-managed natural resource commons with Yochai Benkler’s assertion that commons-based peer production constitutes a ‘third mode of production’ that lies beyond capitalism, socialism and their blends, I argue that open-source urbanism critiques both government and privately-led urban development by advancing a form of postcapitalist urbanism.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 446

    La « visibilité des circuits courts » comme ressource commune by Noé Guiraud, Juliette Rouchier

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…Looking at the history of this complex institution, one can identify successive conflicts and methods of resolution over the five years of its existence. Using Elinor Ostrom’s IAD framework (Institutional Analysis and Development) (2010), it can be ascertained that tensions were due to a social dilemma concerning resource ‘visibility’ (individual and collective) and that rules were devised to define how actors should appropriate and use this resource. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  7. 447

    Prehabilitation during neoadjuvant therapy in patients with cancer of the upper gastrointestinal tract and rectum—the study protocol by Irina Chmelova, Irina Chmelova, Dalibor Pastucha, Dalibor Pastucha, Tomas Hudecek, Zdenek Guran, Zdenek Guran, Sona Ciecotkova, Lubomír Martínek, Jana Zubikova, Alena Matlova, Jakub Dolezel, Dana Salounova, Jakub Chmelo

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…Primary outcomes include: the percentage of patients interested in participating in the study out of all patients indicated for neoadjuvant therapy at University Hospital Ostrava during the observed period, the percentage of patients who complete the prehabilitation programme until the date of surgery and individual patient compliance. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  8. 448
  9. 449

    Addressing Depletion in Alluvial Aquifers by Partik Kumar, Veena Srinivasan

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…To make this case, we draw on Ostrom’s Institutional Analysis and Development framework for the management of common-pool resources. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  10. 450

    Study of collective action for cheese differentiation in the province of Trento, Italian Alps. An institutional approach by Carine Pachoud

    Published 2021-01-01
    “…This article aims at conducting a socio-historical analysis of the institutional context allowing the development of a specific cheese value-chain in the province of Trento (Italian Alps). Using Ostrom’s institutionalist approach, we conducted a historical analysis of the formal and informal multilevel institutions. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  11. 451

    Long-Term Common Resources Management and Resilience in a Local Community: How Kinosaki Onsen could Quickly Respond to COVID-19? by Ayako MORISHITA, Toshio GOTO

    Published 2022-09-01
    “…Our findings not only endorse Elinor Ostrom’s 8 rules for managing the commons, but also exemplify the importance of the family business both in the common-property resource management and community-based resilience from major crises, which haven’t addressed explicitly either in the literature of family business and/or commons management.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  12. 452
  13. 453

    Effect of severe plastic deformation on mechanical and fatigue behaviour of medium-c sheet steel by Rusz S., Hilšer O., Ochodek V., Čížek L., Kraus M., Mareš V., Grajcar A., Švec J.

    Published 2020-01-01
    “…A forming device used in this method is currently being installed in the workplace in the Centre of Advanced Innovation Technologies, VSB Technical University of Ostrava. In the present work the structural characteristics and fracture morphology of Ck55 carbon steel after the application of the DRECE method with a forming tool angle of 118° are presented. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  14. 454
  15. 455

    Influencing factors and mechanisms on self-governed rural public open space quality: a conceptual social-ecological system (SES) framework by Xuerui Shi, Gabriel Hoh Teck Ling

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…This study, operationalizing McGinnis and Ostrom’s SES framework and incorporating collective action theories, identifies institutional-social-ecological factors affecting the quality of self-governed POSs in rural China. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  16. 456
  17. 457

    Social and Institutional Status of Area Exclosure in North Wollo and Waghemira Zones, Northeastern Ethiopia by Melkamu Kassaye Mekonen, Abrham Abiyu Hailu, Asmamaw Alemu Abitew

    Published 2022-01-01
    “…Required data were collected and analyzed by descriptive and inferential statistics and then compared against the best practices of Ostrom’s design principles (ODPs). The result revealed that the local community has good trust and participation in highland (63%) and mid-altitude (70%) areas, but low trust and participation in lowland areas (85%). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  18. 458
  19. 459
  20. 460