WHO OWNS NATURAL RESOURCES IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA?
M. Patricia MARCHAK
pmarchak@interchange.ubc.ca, ltc-uw@facstaff.wisc.edu
Working paper, no. 20. North America series
October 1998, 16 pages; Adobe Acrobat pdf 79K bytes
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ABSTRACT: Property rights are social definitions; they exist as long as the
society is willing to enforce them. If enforcement is missing, they cease to exist. The
reasons for changes might be market conditions, popular sentiments, scientific knowledge,
new technologies, lobbying, or legal battles. Biotechnologies are already having profound
effects on how we organize property rights for natural resources. Resource rights change
as our understandings and sentiments change. This paper presents a general overview of
property rights in natural resources, with particular reference to water and land and
emphasizing that rights are what a society is willing to grant and enforce. If companies,
individuals, groups, or the state are not managing and stewarding resources in sustainable
ways, their authority should be challenged. Rights are social inventions, and society can
abrogate them.
Keywords: Right of property--Canada; Right of property--United States; Natural
resources--Canada--Management; Natural resources--United States--Management; Natural
resources--Social aspects--North America; Tenure systems--North America
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