Governing the Commons | Book Review
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Governing the Commons: A Review of Elinor Ostrom
What if the tragedy of the commons was never really about the commons at all? In this episode, Watson and B. Sovereign do a deep dive into Nobel Prize-winning economist Elinor Ostrom's landmark book Governing the Commons — and unpack why her findings are more relevant than ever for anyone building decentralized protocols, digital communities, or shared resource systems.
What we cover:
- Why "open access" and "common property" are not the same thing — and why the distinction changes everything
- Ostrom's four counterintuitive truths: self-governance works, trust is context-dependent, monitoring drives sustainability, and there are no blueprints
- The eight design principles for durable institutions — from boundaries and graduated sanctions to nested enterprises and legitimate rule change
- How game theory, salience, and reputation reduce enforcement costs in practice
- A critique of the book through the lens of software craftsmanship: primitives, composition, and abstraction
- Why builder usability matters — and why sane defaults beat endless configuration
- A practical checklist for evaluating any commons: digital, physical, or protocol-based
Whether you're building a decentralized platform, governing a community, or just curious about how people solve collective action problems without a boss — this episode gives you the framework.
🔗 More content at bitlemmas.com
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