Endogenous Theory of Property Rights

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Ali Riza Gungen
Bin Md Saman Nor-Hisham
Canal Irrigation
Category=GTP
Chinese Grassland
comparative development
Cost USD
Credibility
Credibility Thesis
credibility thesis in property rights
customary law analysis
Duty Losses
Dynamic disequilibrium
Empty Institution
endogeneity
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Etic Knowledge
Form Function Relations
Function versus form
Global Land Grab
Grazing Ban
Heng Zhao
Indigenous Orang Asli
institutional change
institutional economics
Irrigation Agency
Journal of Peasant Studies
Juliette Levy
Karlis Rokpelnis
labour market institutions
land tenure systems
Large Scale Canal Irrigation
MDS Mapping
Native Title
Ningxia
Online Colour Version
Orang Asli
Paavo Monkkonen
Peter P. Mollinga
Probate Records
Property Registration
Property rights
Public Banks
Satoshi Miyamura
Secondary Canals
SME Loan
socio-economic transformation
Tamil Nadu
Thomas Marois
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367234324
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Feb 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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From a neo-liberal, neo-classical paradigm, secure, formal and private property rights are crucial to fostering sustained development. Institutions that fail to respond to shifting socio-economic opportunities are thus forced to make new arrangements. The enigma is posed by developments on the ground. Why would the removal of authoritarian institutions during the Arab Spring or Iraq War not increase market efficiency but rather cause the reverse, while China and India, despite persisting insecure, informal and common institutions, featured sustained growth? This collection posits that understanding these paradoxes requires a refocusing from form to function, detached from normative assumptions about institutional appearance. In so doing, three things are accomplished. First, starting from case studies on land, it is ascertained that the argument can be meaningfully extended to labour, capital and beyond. Second, the argument validates the ‘Credibility Thesis’ – that is, once institutions persist, they fulfil a function. Third, the collection studies ‘development, broadly construed’, by including the modes of production and beyond, the rural and urban, the developed and developing. This is why it reviews property rights from China and India, to Turkey, Mexico and Malaysia, covering issues such as customary rights and privatization, mining and pastoralism, dam-building and irrigation, but also state-owned banks, trade unions and notaries.

This book was originally published as a special issue of The Journal of Peasant Studies.

Peter Ho is Full Professor at Tsinghua University, China, and Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands. He has published widely in the leading journals of development and planning (H-index: 29). Ho has worked extensively on the revision of ‘Western’ theories of development. He was named Fellow in China’s 1000 Talents Program; awarded the Kapp Prize by EAEPE, one of the largest heterodox economics associations; and was awarded the Consolidator Grant by the European Research Council.