Why do some people get together to manage their common assets? Why do
other groups of people leave those assets to be over-exploited by each
member of the group? The answers could be crucial to the proper
maintenance and use of 'common property resources', from grazing land
through fish stocks to irrigation water. Robert Wade, drawing on
research in areas of Andhra Pradesh where rain is scarce and unreliable,
argues that some villagers develop and finance joint institutions for
cooperative management of common property resources in grazing and
irrigation - but others do not. The main reason lies in the risk of crop
loss.Villages located towards the tail-end of irrigation systems, and
with soils fertile enough to support a high density of livestock, show a
larger amount of corporate organization than villages elsewhere. Placing
his work in the wider context of both the developing world today and the
open-field system of medieval Europe, the author argues that peasants
can under certain conditions organize collectively. Privatization or
state regulation are not the only ways of preventing degradation of
common property resources in peasant societies.