ENVR 203 Lecture 8: ENVR 203 Lecture 8 Feb1
Document Summary
Private property: easy to exclude, belongs to one person, expand capital, western civilization, land that belongs to state, connect to expertise. Public property: owned by state, goods owned by the state, abstract political, not owned by anyone. Common property (cpr: private own, owned by individuals, how can these become public/open access?, not used to this in urban context, unless you secure one part of a mountain it won"t make sense to privitize. Intricate connection between societies and their environmental interactions. Environments: not homogeneous, understand different landscapes as a mosaic where an area is divided in patches with homogenology within these patches, what the environment is, forest transition forest health depends on human pressure. Territorial and indigenous rights: a way nature is reclaimed, land rights cases, settler states idea was that when white people came in there was no one there, law of mother country was what was implemented.