tragedy of the commons

English

Etymology

Reportedly coined in 1968 by U.S. ecologist Garrett Hardin.

Noun

tragedy of the commons (plural tragedies of the commons)

  1. (ecology, economics, politics, social criticism) A situation in which unmanaged use of a shared resource (such as the atmosphere or an ocean) by a number of participants results in the unintended ruin or total consumption of that resource.
    • 1995 May 7, Timothy Egan, “Let the Owner Beware”, in New York Times, retrieved 4 July 2012:
      One theory, known as the tragedy of the commons, holds that people will exploit and abuse something in which they have no ownership stake.
    • 2010 November 18, “Troubles as deep as the oceans lie ahead”, in The Independent, UK, retrieved 4 July 2012:
      Overfishing is the classic tragedy of the commons. Since no single nation "owns" the high seas, they exploit it without restraint and without thought to sustainability.
    • 2012 April 18, Richard Stengel, “Editor's Letter: A World of Possibilities”, in Time, archived from the original on 4 February 2013:
      The economist Elinor Ostrom, who is on our list this year, has written about the tragedy of the commons, which is the idea that self-interest can undermine the common good.

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