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Environmental Knowledge Commons: Cases and Lessons for Knowledge Sharing [Pehme köide]

Edited by (Indiana University, Bloomington), Edited by (Indiana University, Bloomington), Edited by (Indiana University, Bloomington), Edited by (Indiana University, Bloomington)
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Our natural environment constitutes a complex and dynamic global ecosystem that provides essential resources for well-being and survival. Yet the environment is also subject to unprecedented threats from human activities, such as climate change, pollution, habitat loss, biodiversity decline, and the overexploitation of natural resources. This volume argues that such complex, multidimensional challenges demand equally complex, multi-dimensional solutions and calls for coordinated, multi-stakeholder action at all scales, including governments, civil society, the private sector, and individuals. To meet the moment effectively, such interventions require both scientific knowledge about how the environment functions and social and institutional knowledge about the actors involved in environmental governance and management. Chapters include case studies of environmental knowledge collection, management, and sharing to explore how data and knowledge sharing can inform effective, multi-stakeholder action to combat global threats to our environment. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

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'This book shows that data about the environment is not just a technical input, but itself a commons that must be governed with attention to trust, sustainability, and efficiency. By connecting theory with a wide variety of case studies, it demonstrates how managing environmental data as a commons can support more effective and resilient environmental governance. In doing so, it stands as a natural companion to Elinor Ostrom's Governing the Commons bringing the insights of commons governance into the digital and environmental age.' Kosali Simon, Herman B Wells Endowed Professor, Indiana University

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Explores how coordinated data and knowledge sharing can inform effective action to combat global environmental threats.
Introduction; Part I:1. The value of having values: artifacts of
normative knowledge as instruments of collective self-governance for data
flows Greg Bloom;
2. Inexorably entangled environmental and knowledge commons
Todd Aagaard and Brett Fischmann;
3. RACs: truth as a shared resource within
the ESG knowledge commons Chris Draper and Simon Sun; Part II:
4. Linking
physical and knowledge commons in a green stormwater infrastructure program
Erik Nordman, Patrick J. Doran, Christian Glupker, Sam Haapaniemi, Elaine
Isely, Paul Isely, Valerie Strassberg and Shanyn Viars;
5. Co-curating
institutional data on climate change induced loss and damage via expert
panels: implications for the environmental knowledge commons Mathew Kurian,
Yu Kojima, Waed Alshoubaki, Sekela Twisa and Ratna Reddy; Part III:
6.
Building a sustainable space knowledge commons Laetitia Cesari and Simon Sun;
7. Terrestrial environmental data obtained from space, authored Andrea
Harrington; Part IV:
8. The prospects for green patent commons, which
considers whether, and under what conditions, private firms can productively
combine existing patent assets to support the dissemination and use of green
technology Jorge Constreras;
9. The IPCC as expert knowledge commons Michael
Madison.
Anjanette (Angie) Raymond is Director of the Program on Data Management and Information Governance at the Ostrom Workshop, a Professor in the Department of Business Law and Ethics, at the Kelley School of Business, Indiana University, and adjunct professor of law at Maurer Law School (Indiana). She has written widely in the areas of online dispute resolution, data governance, artificial intelligence governance, privacy, international finance, and commercial dispute resolution. Scott J. Shackelford serves on the faculty of Indiana University where he is Cybersecurity Program Chair along with being Executive Director of the Ostrom Workshop. He is also an affiliated scholar at both the Harvard Kennedy School's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs and Stanford Center for Internet and Society, as well as senior fellow at the Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research. His previous books include The Internet of Things: What Everyone Needs to Know (2020), Governing New Frontiers in the Information Age: Toward Cyber Peace (2020), and Managing Cyber Attacks in International Law, Business, and Relations: In Search of Cyber Peace (2014). Jessica Steinberg is Director of the Program on Environment and Natural Resource Governance at the Ostrom Workshop, Associate Professor and Chair in the Department of International Studies at the Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies, Indiana University, and adjunct professor of political science. Her research focuses on the political economy of development, local politics of natural resource extraction, information politics, and violent conflict. Her first book, Mines, Communities, and States: The Local Politics of Natural Resource Extraction in Africa (2019), was awarded the 2020 Sprout Award for the best book in environmental politics by the International Studies Association. Michael Mattioli is a former Sun Microsystems microchip designer turned award-winning professor of law at the Maurer School of Law, Indiana University. Mattioli's scholarship on law and technology has been published in leading law reviews. He is also the co-editor of Big Data Is Not a Monolith (2016).