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  • About the Conference
    • Welcome & Introduction
    • Conference Theme & Sub-themes
    • Accepted Panels
    • Information for Online Participants
    • Pre-conference workshops
    • Organizers
    • Sponsors
    • Hosting institutions
    • Elinor Ostrom Award
    • Contact us
  • Information for Online Participants
  • Visas
    • Visa Information
    • IASC membership
  • Schedules & guidelines
    • General Program
    • Accepted Panels grouped in 12 sub-themes
    • Author Index
    • Important Dates
    • Conference Venue
  • Excursions
    • In-Conference Excursions — Thursday June 19th, 2025
    • Post-Conference Excursions — June 21 – 22, 2025
  • Fees, Travel, Food & Lodging
    • Conference Registration Fees
    • Travel
    • Food at the Conference
    • Participant Lodging
  • About the Conference
    • Welcome & Introduction
    • Conference Theme & Sub-themes
    • Accepted Panels
    • Information for Online Participants
    • Pre-conference workshops
    • Organizers
    • Sponsors
    • Hosting institutions
    • Elinor Ostrom Award
    • Contact us
  • Information for Online Participants
  • Visas
    • Visa Information
    • IASC membership
  • Schedules & guidelines
    • General Program
    • Accepted Panels grouped in 12 sub-themes
    • Author Index
    • Important Dates
    • Conference Venue
  • Excursions
    • In-Conference Excursions — Thursday June 19th, 2025
    • Post-Conference Excursions — June 21 – 22, 2025
  • Fees, Travel, Food & Lodging
    • Conference Registration Fees
    • Travel
    • Food at the Conference
    • Participant Lodging

Accepted Panels

  • Master Panel Schedule ([NEW] People have asked for this to be restored, so we have done so. This spreadsheet is a little outdated. We hope to have it updated by second panel session today (Monday).  Scroll down to see panels/sessions and use new author search facility to the right)
  • Panel/schedule in pdf form for downloading to your computer [New]
  • Panel Chair and Panelist Information and Information for panel tech management 
  • Pre-recorded panel video presentations are linked here (for some panels only, listed by panel/session number). 
  • ZOOM PARTICIPANTS — IMPORTANT:
    • All IASC 2025 Zoom lines require a passcode. This was emailed to registrants on June 10 at 21:21 UTC with the subject “IASC 2025 Online Participation Information” from the sender IASC 2025 Online Committee <cschweik@umass.edu>. Another email will also go out one hour before the start of the first Plenary. If you have registered and cannot find the email, message the IASC 2025 Help WhatsApp Group (best) or email the online engagement team.   

Below is a list of accepted panels organized by conference subtheme.
You can expand any panel entry to see abstracts and panel participants as well as links to individual sessions.

Sub-theme 1

Staying true to IASC roots: environmental commons in a changing world

Theme Details

Commons scholars, particularly those from the Bloomington School tradition, have a long and rich history of studying various environmental commons such as forests, fisheries, pasturelands, and irrigation systems. These environmental commons have been thoroughly documented and analyzed across diverse contexts, providing a solid foundation for empirical research and theorization on social and environmental governance. Recently, new types of environmental uses and commons have been identified and analyzed, including coral reefs, the atmosphere and the space beyond the atmosphere, the high seas and the deep seabed.

This theme invites submissions that focus on the management of both traditional environmental commons—forests, fisheries, and irrigation systems—and newer and larger-scale environmental commons. We welcome contributions that explore the use, management, distribution, and conservation of environmental commons across different contexts, as well as the interconnections among them. In keeping with the IASC’s foundational principles, a central focus of this sub-theme will be on the theory and practice of building local institutions for governing environmental commons in a changing world.

Program Committee sub-theme members: Praneeta Mudliar, Maria Claudia-Lopez

Panels

Panel 1. 1.

Roundtable Game Frontiers: from understanding collective action to supporting it

Chair: Thomas Falk
International Food Policy Research Institute
Details
Session 1. 1.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOW245
Participatory vision-building for Fostering Collective Action and Sustainability. Insights From an Economic Experiment in the Field
in-person
Juan-Felipe Ortiz-Riomalo1, Stefanie Engel1, and Ann-Kathrin Koessler2
1Department of Environmental Econommics, Osnabrück University, Germany, 2Environmental Behaviour and Planning Research Group, Institute of Environmental Planning, Leibniz University Hanover, Germany
Effectiveness of Experiential Learning Games for Enhancing Sustainable Water Management and Governance in India
in-person
Thomas Falk1, Ruth Meinzen-Dick2, Pratiti Priyadarshini3, Richu Sanil3, Vishwambhar Duche4, Katrina Kosec2, Mequanint Melesse5, Wei Zhang2, Hagar ElDidi2, and Lucia Carrillo2
1International Food Policy Research Institute, Germany, 2International Food Policy Research Institute, United States, 3Foundation for Ecological Security, India, 4International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, India, 5International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Kenya
Experiential Learning to Support community-based Climate Change Adaptation in the Zambezi Region of Namibia
in-person
Franziska Auch1, Thomas Falk2, Ivo Steimanis3, and Björn Vollan3
1University of Stuttgart, Germany, 2International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), Germany, 3Philipps-University of Marburg, Germany
A Conceptual Proposal for Impact Assessment of Serious Games
online
Erika Speelman
Wageningen University, The Netherlands
Learning About Cooperation by Aggregate Farmers Using the Netlogo Farmsquares Platform
in-person (Wei Zhang)
Andrew Bell1, Wei Zhang2, Kristin Davis2, Dickson Kinuthia3, and Upeksha Hettiarachchi2
1Cornell University, United States, 2IFPRI, United States, 3IFPRI, Kenya

Panel 1. 2.

Comprehensive and Lasting Solutions for 'Wicked Problems' in Commons Governance

co-Chairs: Prosper Tonderai Mataruse1 and Arthur Perrotton
1Department of Community and Social Development, University of Zimbabwe
Details
Session 1. 2.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOW205
How to Safeguard Biodiversity Commons Within Transformation Processes: Exploring How to Guide decision-making Processes in Spatial Planning
online
Karla E. Locher-Krause1, Heidi Wittmer1, Yuanzao Zhu1, Maria Partidario2, Margarida Monteiro2, and Ulrike Tröger1
1Environmental Centre fro Enviroenmental Research -UFZ, Germany/Chile, 2Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal
How Might We Common the Weather? and Should We Even Try? Discussing the Potential Multispecies Ethical, Legal, and Social Issues (MELSI) of Weather Commoning in Light of Japan’s Moonshot Goal 8 Project for Developing Weather Modification Technologies by 2050
online
Chris Berthelsen, Christoph Rupprecht, Tsuyoshi Hatori, and Takuya Iwahori
Ehime University, Japan
Using Participatory Mapping for a Shared Understanding of Deforestation Dynamics in Murehwa District, Zimbabwe
online
Prosper Tonderai Mataruse
University of Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe
Water Commons Nested Platforms for Tackling the ‘Wickedness’ of Jakarta’s Flooding Problem
online
Yanti (T.) Kusumanto
TYK research & action consulting, The Netherlands
Collaborative Initiative for Securing Forest Commons: a Multi- Stakeholder Approach
in-person
Meena Das Mohapatra
Foundation for Ecological Security, India

Panel 1. 3.

Water Governance Working Group Panel on Interdisciplinary Approaches to Exploring Water Governance and Irrigation

co-Chairs: Lavanya Suresh1 and Maija Halonen-Akatwijuka2
1Birla Institute of Technology & Science, Pilani, Hyderabad Campus, India, 2University of Bristol, UK
Details
Session 1. 3. A.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS0134
Water Export Restrictions: Clear Boundaries or New Enclosures?
online
Anita Chaudhry1 and William Blomquist2
1California State University, Chico, United States, 2IU Ostrom Workshop, United States
Pomegranate, Pumps, Pipes, and Ponds: Need for Reconceptualising the Irrigation Command Area in Sangola, Maharashtra, India
online
Sachin Tiwale1 and Komal Dalvi2
1Water and Society Programme, Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE), India, 2Independent Scholar, India
A Framework for Addressing “Wicked Problems” of Groundwater Governance: Knowledge, Motivation, and Agency of Key Actors in Pakistan
in-person
Ruth Meinzen-Dick1 and Bryan Bruns2
1International Food Policy Research Institute, United States, 2Consultant, United States
Supporting Groundwater Management in India Based on a Systemic and Behavioral Perspective
online
Richu Sanil1, Thomas Falk2, Ruth Meinzen-Dick3, and Pratiti Priyadarshini1
1Foundation for Ecological Security, India, 2International Food Policy Research Institute, Germany, 3International Food Policy Research Institute, United States
Regulatory Pathways for Water Pollution Abatement: Comparative Analysis of Different Policy Regimes in the Ganges River
online
Anjali Yadav
Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, India
Can Collaboration Thrive in a Private Water System? Comparison of Water Users’ Organizations in Chile
in-person
Anahi Ocampo1, Guillermo Donoso2, Daniela Rivera2, Christian Rojas3, Elisa Blanco2, Pilar Barria1, Michael Schoon4, Paul Cisneros5, Micaela Trimble6, Gabriela Alfaro7, and Sebastián Montoya7
1Universidad de Chile, Chile, 2Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile, 3Universidad Andrés Bello, Chile, 4Arizona State University, United States, 5Colorado State University, United States, 6Saras Institute, Uruguay, 7Independent, Chile
Session 1. 3. B.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 PM – 12:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS0134
Global South Perspectives on the Commons: Emic Perspectives on co-management of Water as a Common Pool Resource in Rural semi-arid Settings of Rural Kitui County, Kenya
online
Mariah Ngutu1, Dalmas Omia2, Mercy Musyoka2, Faith Wambua2, and Salome Bukachi2
1National Defence University- Kenya (NDU-K), 2University of Nairobi, Kenya
Social Norms and Governance in Groundwater Collectives in India: a Comparative Analysis
online
Swaran Viswanathan1,2, Cheela Bakka Reddy1, Gollapalli Uthappa1, and Adusumilli Ravindra1
1Watershed Support Services and Activities Network (WASSAN), India2School of Public Policy - IIT Delhi, India
A Polycentric Framework to Understand small-scale Irrigation in Andhra Pradesh, India
online
Lavanya Suresh
Birla Institute of Technology & Science, Pilani, Hyderabad Campus, India
The Community-based Rural Water Governance and Institutional Compliance
online
Seemi Waheed
University of Management and Technology, Pakistan
Session 1. 3. C.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS0134
Irrigation Infrastructures, State Authority and Climate Crisis in Northern Kurdistan
Adnan Mirhanoglu and Eray Cayli
University of Hamburg, Germany
Conflict and Collaboration in a Collaborative Forum: a Discourse Network Analysis of Stakeholder Interactions in the Santa Lucia River Basin Committee (Uruguay)
in-person
Tomás Olivier1, Natalia Dias Tadeu2, and Micaela Trimble2,3
1Syracuse University, United States, 2Universidad de la República, Uruguay, 3SARAS Institute, Uruguay
Cooperation and Asymmetries in self-governing Irrigation Systems
online
Maija Halonen-Akatwijuka
University of Bristol, United Kingdom
Ripples of Reciprocity: Navigating Trust and Collective Governance in Hydrosocial Territories
in-person
Jean-Paul Benavides1, Wannes Slosse2, Carlos Quezada1, Boris Branisa1, Jeroen Buysse2, Marijke D'Haese2, and Koen Shoors2
1Universidad Católica Boliviana, Bolivia, 2Department of Agricultural Economics, Ghent University, Belgium

Panel 1. 4.

Potentials of commons for ecosystem services provision

Chair: Mateja Šmid Hribar
Research center of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts
Details
Session 1. 4.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOW205
Re-imagining Ecosystem Service Zones in Postcolonial Cities of the Global South
in-person
Abhinandan Bera
Department of Architecture, Penn State, United States
The Role of Common Lands in Provision of Ecosystem Services of Pollination and Recreation in Triglav National Park in Slovenia
in-person
Mateja Šmid Hribar and Daniela Ribeiro
Research Center of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Slovenia
Commons, Coffee and Ecosystem Services in Honduras
in-person
Catherine Tucker
University of Florida, United States

Panel 1. 5.

Challenges and Opportunities for Mountain Commons and Communities

Chair: Catherine Tucker
University of Florida
Details
Session 1. 5. A.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 138
Environmental Security Complex in the Himalayas: Challenges and Opportunities for Mountain Governance
online
Akriti Sharma
National Institute of Advanced Studies, India
Living with Fire in the Mountains: Adaptation of Agricultural Practices by Quechua Farmers in the Peruvian Andes
in-person
Vanessa Luna-Celino
University of Florida, United States
Grouping Common Lands as an Alternative for Forest Management in Depopulated Inland Portugal: Inconsistencies of Designing Public Policies From a Distance
online
Ana Luísa Luz
Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences - Nova University of Lisbon, Portugal
Unraveling the Political Ontology of Lithium: New Contested Imaginaries and Discourses in the Altiplano
in-person
Roger Merino
Universidad del Pacífico, Perú
Session 1. 5. B.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 138
Forests Under Pressure. Commoning for Forest Preservation in the Context of the Anthropocene and Neoliberalism
in-person
Leticia Merino
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México
Shifting Landscapes: Climate Vulnerability and the Future of Small Farming in the Himalayas
in-person
Sadaf Javed
Department of Geography, Rutgers University, New Jersey, United States
Sustaining and Adapting Mountain Commons Through Biocultural Design: Insights From a Miao (Hmong) Family-based Initiative Towards Autonomous and Sustainable Rural Development in Guizhou, China
in-person
Wai Lun Lam
University of Manitoba, Natural Resources Institute, Canada
Ecology of the Commons: the Case of Leitza, Navarra
in-person
William Bryant Logan
Pratt Institute, United States

Panel 1. 6.

Illicit Economies and The Commons

Chair: Maria Alejandra Velez
Universidad de los Andes
Details
Session 1. 6.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Campus Center 174
Llicit Economies and the Commons: Environmental and Social Transitions in Frontier Regions
in-person
Mauricio Velasquez, María Alejandra Velez, Beatriz Ramos, and Estefania Martinez
Andes University, Colombia
Coca-Based Local Growth and Its Economic and Socio Environmental Impacts in Colombia
in-person
Maria Alejandra Velez Lesmez1, Lucas Marin2, Manuel Fernandez1, Eduard Martinez3, and Paulo Murillo4
1Universidad de los Andes, Colombia, 2Northwestern Univeruity, United States, 3Solidary Economy Superintendency, Colombia, 4Universidad del Tolima, Colombia
From Miner-Level to Higher-Capital Interventions in Artisanal/Small Gold Mining: Potentially Profitable Private Interaction Where Public Institutions Have Failed the Commons
online
Alexander Pfaff
Duke University, USA
Conservation Governance, Illicit Economies, and the Commons: Lessons From Guatemala’s Forests
online
Jennifer Devine1 and Yunuen Reygadas2
1Texas State University, USA, 2Texas Tech University, USA

Panel 1. 7.

Societal transformations and biodiversity: Understanding the interplay of institutional, interpersonal, and intrapersonal change

co-Chairs: Ilkhom Soliev1, Agnes Zolyomi1,2,3, and Alex Franklin3
1Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, 2Groningen University, 3Coventry University
Details
Session 1. 7. A.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 138
Biocultural Conservation and the Commons: Exploring the Synergies and Tensions
in-person
Michael Schoon
Arizona State University, United States
Exploring Behavioural Theories for Biodiversity Prioritisation in Policy and Practice
in-person (Soliev)
Agnes Zolyomi and Ilkhom Soliev
Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Germany
Actualizing the human-rights Approach in the Post-2020 GBF: Prospects and Challenges
online
Emmanuel Nuesiri
IUCN Commission for Environmental, Economic and Social Policy (CEESP), United States
Intersectional Environmental Justice in Dutch-Brazilian Beef and Soy Supply Chains: Challenges for the EUDR
online
Vinícius Mendes and Cristina Yumie Aoki Inoue
Radboud University, The Netherlands
Session 1. 7. B.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 138
News on Biodiversity? an Analysis of the Biodiversity Discourse in European News Outlets in 2010 and 2022
online
Mirjam Schleiffer
Research Institue of Organic Agriculture (FiBL), Switzerland
Intersecting Gender, Land and Resource Rights: Structure, Commons, and Empowerment
online
Sonali Mohapatra
Independent Researcher, India
Governing Nature-based Solutions: a Systematic Review of IAD and NAS Applications to Nbs
in-person
Tim Möschl and Ines Dombrowsky
German Institute of Development and Sustainability (IDOS), Germany
Urban-rural Transformations to Strengthen Social Cohesion and Biodiversity Prioritization Through Commons Governance in Germany
online
Torsten Wähler, Ilkhom Soliev, and Sven Grüner
Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Germany

Panel 1.8.

Commons aflame: Collective fire management

co-Chairs: Kate Schreckenberg1 and Abigail R. Croker2
1King's College London , 2currently at the Centre for Environmental Policy, Imperial College London and, from Nov 2024, at the Centre for BioComplexity, Princeton University
Details
Session 1. 8. A. Changing landscape dynamics, historical approaches
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN 155
The Role of Integrated Fire Management on Climate Change Adaptation for Ecosystem Services in Tropical and Subtropical Regions
online
Adriana Ford1, Nuria Prat-Guitart2, Juan Caamaño2, and Júlia Nogués2
1Imperial College London, United Kingdom, 2Pau Costa Foundation, Spain
Colonial Fire Governance: the Historical Roots and Contemporary Consequences of Fire Suppression
in-person
Jordan Thomas
University of California, Santa Barbara, United States
Changing Commons and Their Implications for Fire Management in Northern Ghana’s Savanna Landscapes
online
Rahinatu Sidiki Alare
King's College London, United Kingdom
The Role of Fire in Crofting in Scotland: Challenges to Muirburn in the 21st Century
online
Cathy Smith
Royal Holloway University of London / Leverhulme Centre for Wildfires, Environment and Society, United Kingdom
Fire Triangle: Law, Lived Realities, and Local Politics in the Uttarakhand Himalaya
online
Kapil Yadav
King's College London, United Kingdom
Modernity, Coloniality, Decolonialty of Wildland Fire Management in Treaty #3 Territory, Canada
in-person
Iain Davidson-Hunt1, Emmanuella Addae-Wireko1, Lucas King2, and Jordan Benoit2
1University of Manitoba, Canada, 2Grand Council Treaty #3, Canada
Wildfires and Changing Mediterranean Agroforestry Landscapes
in-person
Ioanna Chatzikonstantinou
Polytechnic University of Turin, Italy
Session 1. 8. B. Focus on Values, knowledge systems
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN 155
Fire Management Under Different Systems of Resource Ownership: Examples From California
in-person
Mark Blumler
Binghamton University, USA
Forbidden Fire and the Role of Collective Action in community-based Fire Management
in-person
Vanessa Luna-Celino
University of Florida, United States
Promoting Good Fire Nationwide: Successful Efforts From U.S. Outreach Professionals
online
Leslie Boby1, Jennifer Fawcett2, Carrie Berger3, David Godwin4, Jesse Kreye5, Allison Deak6, and Doug Cram7
1Southern Regional Extension Forestry, United States, 2North Carolina State University Forestry Extension, United States, 3Oregon State University College of Forestry, United States, 4Southern Fire Exchange, United States, 5Pennsyvlania State University, United States, 6University of California Extension, United States, 7New Mexico State University, United States
Understanding the Development and Effectiveness of Community Wildfire Protection Plans
online
Maximilian Stiefel
King's College London, United Kingdom
Understanding Wildfire Collaborative Archetypes: How Landscape Heterogeneity Influences Trust Diversity and Outcomes
online
Jaishri Srinivasan1, Kelly Jones2, Melinda Morgan3, Michael Schoon4, and Candice Carr-Kelman4
1University of California Merced, USA, 2New Mexico State University, USA, 3University of New Mexico, USA, 4Arizona State University, USA
What do wildfire plans protect? Analyzing community-driven values in wildfire protection plans
in-person
Nicola Ulibarri1, Ryan J. McCarty2, Matthew Hamilton3, Holly K. Nesbitt4, and Matthew A. Williamson4
1University of California Irvine, United States, 2DrySci, Inc., United States, 3Ohio State University, United States, 4Boise State University, United States

Panel 1. 9.

Beyond tenure: Implications for forest-based livelihoods

co-Chairs: Divya Gupta1, Prateek Gautam2, and Priyanshu Gupta3
1Binghamton University, 2XIM University, India, 3Indian Institute of Management Lucknow, India
Details
Session 1. 9. B.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS231
Approaches for Facilitating community-led Forest Management in post-rights Scenario in Central India
online
Anuja Date, Shruti Mokashi, Sharachchandra Lele, and Gautam Aredath
Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology & the Environment (ATREE), India
Land Tenure and Conservation on Working Lands: a Synthesis of Promises and Challenges
in-person
Pranay Ranjan
Northern Arizona University, USA
Typology of Leadership in Nepal’s Community Forestry: Latent Class Analysis of Governance and Management Preferences
in-person
Anukram Adhikary, Erin Sills, and Rajan Parajuli
North Carolina State University, United States
Anticommons-in-Action: Tenurial Reforms and Resource Conflict in Hasdeo Aranya Forests in Central India
in-person
Priyanshu Gupta1 and Rajesh Bhattacharya2
1IIM Lucknow, India, 2IIM Calcutta, India
Session 1. 9. A.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN211
Soliga Indigenous Community, Livelihood, and Conservation Under the Forest Rights Act in Western Ghats, India
in-person
Siddappa Setty R and Madegowda Chikkanajegowda
Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology & the Environment (ATREE), India
Assessing the Gendered Impacts of the Forest Rights Act on India’s Marginalized Community
in-person
Divya Gupta
Binghamton University, United States
Assessing Security of Land Rights Among Women in Caqueta, Colombia Using Mixed Methodologies
online
Debbie Pierce
University of British Columbia, Canada
Interrogating Commons in the Neoliberal Regime: a Study of Forest Economy and Changing Land Tenures in India’s Himalayan Region
in-person
Vandana .1 and Krithi S2
1Jindal Global Business School, India, 2Jindal School of Journalism & Communication, India

Panel 1. 10.

Common concerns. Environmental literacy among commoners in early modern Europe

Chair: Tine De Moor
Erasmus University Rotterdam
Details
Session 1. 10.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN211
The Establishment of Innovative Protocols to Control Resource Management Among Early Modern Commoners
online
José-Miguel Lana-Berasain
Public University of Navarre, Spain
Nature in Transition: Environmental Consciousness and the Struggle Over Common Lands in Ottoman Southeast Europe
in-person
Dilek Ozkan Pantazis
The Cyprus Institute, STARC, Greece
Caring for Water Quality. the Interplay Between Government, Civil Society, and city-dwellers in Early Modern Holland
in-person
Marianne Groep-Foncke
Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Fostering Environmental Literacy Among Members of Early Modern Fishery Cooperatives in France and Spain
in-person
Tine De Moor
Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands

Panel 1. 11.

Adaptive ocean governance: novel approaches for navigating complex institutional and property rights arrangements

co-Chairs: Ben Nagel1, Stefan Partelow2, and Achim Schlüter1
1Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research (ZMT), Germany, 2University of Bonn, Germany
Details
Session 1. 11. A.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HASA0124
Fishing for Fishmeal in Mauretania the Dynamics of Complex Property Rights Arrangement.
online
Achim Schlüter1, Joeri Schloltens2, Abibatou Fall3, and Elimane Kane4
1ZMT, Germany, 2UvA, Netherlands, 3ARADES, Senegal, 4IMROP, Maurtianie
Mental Models of Coastal Marine Resource Governance in Sechura Bay, Peru
online
Ben Nagel, Achim Schlueter, and Michael Kriegl
Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Research (ZMT), Germany
Place-Based Management in a Networked Landscape: Marine Managers and the Implications of Social Media-Based Publics
in-person
Kapono Gaughen
University of Hawaii at Manoa, Communication and Information Sciences PhD Program, United States
A Global Assessment of Preferential Access Areas for small-scale Fisheries
in-person
Xavier Basurto1, John Virdin2, Nicole Franz3, Sarah DeLand2, Bea Smith2, Jesse Cleary2, Tibor Vegh2, and Pat Halpin2
1Stanford University, United States / Mexico, 2Duke University, United States, 3FAO, Italy
Illuminating small-scale Producers’ Diversity for Food Systems Transformation
in-person (Ciseros)
Alba Aguion1, Xavier Basurto1, Simon Funge-Smith2, Edwin Iversen1, Maria del Mar Mancha-Cisneros3, and Nicolas Gutierrez4
1Duke University, United States, 2Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Thailand, 3Michigan State University, United States, 4Fisheries and Aquaculture Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Italy
Session 1. 11. B.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HASA0124
Who, When, Where, Why, How? a Global Scan of Temporary Marine Protection
in-person
Anastasia Quintana1, Eréndira Aceves Bueno2, Steven Gaines1, Emilie Lindkvist3, and Yutian Fang1
1UCSB, USA, 2University of Washington, USA, 3Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden
Sustainable Tourism, Community, and Marine Protected Areas: an Insight Into the Socio-Economic Implication on Conservation and Community Management
online
Vishnu M R1 and Ancy V P2
1Department of Applied Economics, Cochin University of Science and Technology, India, 2School of Industrial Fisheries, Cochin University of Science and Technology, India
Shoreline Change Analysis of Chellanam Coast Using Digital Shoreline Analysis System and Its Impact on Fishing Community
online
Alfred Thomas Jose1 and Ancy V P2
1Marine and Atmospheric Science Department, Indian Institute of Remote Sensing, Dehradun, India, 2School of Industrial Fisheries, Cochin University of Science and Technology, India
Challenges and Prospects of Sustainable Shoreline and Its Impact on Fishing Communities with Special Reference to Chellanam
online
Ancy V P1 and Alfred Thomas Jose2
1School of Industrial Fisheries, Cochin University of Science and Technology, India, 2Marine and Atmospheric Science Department, Indian Institute of Remote Sensing, Dehradun, India

Panel 1. 13.

To be or Not to be: Space as Global Commons

co-Chairs: Scott J. Schackelford and Eytan Tepper
Ostrom Workshop, Indiana University
Details
Session 1. 13.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS140
A Cosmolocal Framework for Space Commons
online
Lucas Lemos
Tallinn University of Technology (TalTech), Estonia
Meeting “New Space” Challenges to the Vision of an Outer Space Commons: Critical Next Steps
in-person
Deborah Housen-Couriel
Housen-Couriel Law Offices, Israel
Governing the Lunar Habitat: Lessons From Colonial History
online
Eytan Tepper, Gustavo Torrens, and Scott Shackelford
Indiana University Bloomington, United States
Evaluating Proposals for Taxation of Space Activities From the Perspective of Space as a Global Commons
in-person
Gerard Conway and Peter Jelfs
Brunel University of London, United Kingdom
Low Earth Orbit Coordination as a Commons Problem
in-person
Miles Lifson
The Aerospace Corporation, United States of America

Panel 1. 14.

Contributing to the emergence of innovative approaches in governing common resources at the interface of protected areas and agropastoral activities

co-Chairs: Koffi Olulumazo and Everisto Mapedza
Details
Session 1. 14.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 137
Dissecting the Design of Collective Payments for Environmental Services
online
Mabrouk Laâbar1,2 and Mohamed Jaouad2
1Faculty of Economic Sciences and Management of Sfax, University of Sfax, Tunisia, 2Laboratory of Economy and Rural Communities, Arid Regions Institute, University of Gabes, Tunisia
The Conservation Policy in Niger: a Critical Review After a Recent Project of Declassification
online
Mamane Sani Ibrahim
Abdou Moumouni University of Niamey, Niger
Conflict Hotspots: an Innovative Approach to Increasing people’s Resilience and Reduce Conflicts in Northern Cameroon
online
Ann Degrande, Divine Foundjem, Yvan Kwidja, Djodi Wadong, Herve Boukoua, Gaspard Heudaibe, and Farikou Mamadou
Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF)
Finding an Appropriate Mode of Management of Interfaces Between Protected Areas and Agropastoral Activities in Wet and Central Africa Sahel: Contributions From the N’Djamena Conference of October 2024
online
Koffi Alinon
Centre for International Cooperation in Agricultural Research for Development (CIRAD), France

Panel 1.15.

Designing and Implementing Multistakeholder Platforms and their implications for Inclusive Collective Action

co-Chairs: Anne Larson and Ruth Meinzen-Dick
Details
Session 1. 15. A.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 138
Multistakeholder Platforms for the Governance of Agroecological Transitions: Insights and Lessons Learned From Eight Countries
in-person
Hagar ElDidi
International Food Policy Research Institute, United States
Fostering Accountability in Multistakeholder Platforms: a Decolonial Approach to Community Engagement
in-person
Anne Larson1 and Juan Pablo Sarmiento Barletti2
1CIFOR-ICRAF, United States, 2CIFOR-ICRAF, Peru
An Evolving Landscape for Nexus Governance in Transboundary Basins: Recognizing and Harnessing the Growing Role of Multistakeholder Platforms (Msps)
in-person
Ryan Nehring1 and Jonathan Lautze2
1International Food Policy Research Institute, United States, 2International Water Management Institute, South Africa
Session 1. 15. B.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 138
Why Do Multistakeholder Processes Emerge and Flourish? Identifying and Operationalizing the Leading Hypotheses
in-person
Krister Andersson
University of Notre Dame, United States
Gender Inclusion in the Designing and Implementation of Multistakeholder Dialogues in Zambia
in-person
Everisto Mapedza, Marie-Charlotte Buisson, Florence Ng’ambi, Freddie Siangulube, and Winnie Kasoma Pele
International Water Management Institute (IWMI), Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), Ghana.

Panel 1. 16.

Collective Action in Aquaculture and Fisheries Management

Chair: Sarah Appiah
Details
Session 1. 16.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 138
Learnings From Different Experiences on Community group-based Aquaculture Systems in Ghana
in-person
Sarah Appiah1, Giulia Zane1, and Marie-Charlotte Buisson2
1International Water Management Institute, Ghana, 2International Water Management Institute, Sri Lanka
Dynamics of Collective Action Initiatives: an Integrated Framework for Studying Contextualized Socio-Political Dynamics
online
Carla Baldivieso1, Sanjiv De Silva2, and Michelle Bonatti3
1Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany, 2International Water Management Institute, Sri Lanka, 3Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research, Germany
Research on Voluntary Resource Management Efforts by Fishermen Based on a Rotation System: a Case Study of Scallop Fishing in Abashiri Fisheries Cooperative Association, Hokkaido, Japan.
in-person
Sadao Harada
Doshisha Unicveristy, Japan
Straits as Commons: Rethinking Maritime Governance in the Wake of Environmental Disasters
online
Youness Achmani
Université du Littoral Côte d'Opale, France

Panel 1. 17.

Communities, Collaboration and Stewardship

Chair: Stefan Partelow
Details
Session 1. 17.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 137
Community Stewardship to Address Dispossessions: Impressions From Karnataka Coast
online
Amalendu Jyotishi1 and Prashanth Ramappa2
1Azim Premji University, India, 2Foundation for Ecological Security, India
A Systematic Review of the Commoning Literature: Definitions, Applications and Transformative Potential
in-person
Stefan Partelow and Lennart Schulze
Center for Life Ethics, University of Bonn, Germany
Strengthening Community Stewardship of Shared Natural Resources: Evidence From Meghalaya’s Payment for Ecosystem Scheme
in-person
Naveen Isarapu1, Mahashweta Mahiyaria2, and Subrata Singh1
1Foundation for Ecological Security, India, 2Independent, India
Enhancing Demographic Diversity of scientist-community Collaborations Improves Wildlife Monitoring in Madagascar
in-person
Fiona Price
Dartmouth College and the Nicholas School at Duke University, United States
Social Capital and Cooperative Behaviors in Public Goods Games: a Dynamic Structural Equation Modeling Application
in-person
Maiko Sakamoto
The University of Tokyo, Japan

Panel 1. 18.

Community-based forestry: traditions and challenges

Chair: Lok Mani Sapkota
Details
Session 1. 18.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS0134
Emergence and Decline of Forest Commons: the Role of Social, Economic, and Political Factors in Sustaining Interest
in-person
Lok Mani Sapkota1, Reem Hajjar1, and Tol Sokchea2
1Oregon State University, United States, 2The Regional Community Forestry Training Center for Asia and the Pacific (RECOFTC), Cambodia
Tenure, Zoning and Forest and Landtype Classification: the Multiple Threats to and Strategies for Conserving and Regenerating the Mangar Bani Sacred Grove and the Aravalli Hill Forest Commons of the Urbanizing Delhi National Capital Region
online
Chetan Agarwal
Independent, India

Panel 1. 19.

Livelihood transitions and the commons

Chair: Jesper Larsson
Details
Session 1. 19.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS0134
The Decline of “Sheep Pastures” in Maharashtra During the British Colonial Times and the Idea of Common Pasturelands
in-person
Rushikesh Gawade
Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, India
From Field to Craft: Maya People’s Gendered Relations with the Jipijapa Palm in San Jose Village, Belize
in-person
Julia Arzu
University of Manitoba, Canada
Early Modern Arctic Inequality – Transition to Reindeer Pastoralism
in-person
Jesper Larsson
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden
Re-imagining Youth and Irrigation Future: a Systematic Scoping Review
in-person
Gitta Shrestha
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden
Harnessing Local Knowledge: Analysis of Rangeland Governance Among the Borana and Rendile Pastoral Communities in Northern Kenya
online
Malit Wako, Lilli Scheiterle, and Brigitte Kaufmann
German Institute for Tropical and Subtropical Agriculture(DITSL), Germany

Panel 1. 20.

Experimental and policy tools for commons governance

Chair: Dominik Suri
Details
Session 1. 20.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN 155
Designing Better Games and Experiments: a Tool for Calibration of Dynamic Systems
online
Michał Pająk
Wroclaw University of Economics and Business, Polska
Leveraging Social Norms for Sustainable Forest Management – Even During Income Shocks? Evidence From a lab-in-the-field Study in Rural Ethiopia
online
Dominik Suri1, Jan Börner1, Zerihun Kebebew2, and Sebastian Kube1
1University of Bonn, Germany, 2Jimma University, Ethiopia
Exploring Leadership Styles in Social Enterprise Dual Mission Practice: Evidence From Healthcare Ses in Ghana.
online
Abdul-latif Mohammed
The University of Newcastle, Australia
Diagnosing Agri-Food Value Chain Governance to Tackle Aquifer Depletion: Insights From Iran
online
Ali Yousefi
Department of Rural Development, College of Agriculture, Isfahan University of Technology, Iran

Panel 1. 21.

Hydrological Governance and Stewardship

Chair: Kamal Devkota
Details
Session 1. 21.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 138
The Anambra Imo River Basin Development Authority in Water Governance and the Economic Development of Southeastern Nigeria
online
Ezionyinye Ukegbu
Historical Society of Nigeria (HSN), Nigeria
From Commons to Commodity: Water (in)access Through Infrastructure and Institutional Shifts in the Urbanizing Himalaya
in-person
Kamal Devkota
KU Leuven, Belgium
Participation Fatigue: an Emerging Challenge to Water Governance
in-person
Oswaldo M. Medina-Ramírez1, Amber Wutich1, Carolina Jordáo2, Cara Jacob1, and Laura Castro-Diaz3
1Arizona State University, United States of America, 2University of Massachusetts Boston, United States of America
Coping with Water Insecurity in U.S. Colonias
in-person
Laura Castro-Diaz
University of Massachusetts Boston, United States

Panel 1. 22.

Innovative technology for commons governance

Chair: Matthew Victor
Details
Session 1. 22.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HASA0124
Trade-Based Money Laundering (TBML) Dynamics Within Ghana’s Automobile Industry
online
Ama Asantewah Ahene-Codjoe1 and Bishop Akolgo2
1University of Ghana, Ghana, 2Technology Integration Point Ventures, Ghana
Reinvigorating Civic Threads with MAPLE, a Novel Digital Public Space
online
Matthew Victor1 and Nathan Sanders2
1MAPLE - www.mapletestimony.org, USA, 2Berkman Klein Center, USA
Knowledge Organization as Governance: Lessons in Adaptive Infrastructure Design
online
Brooke Ann Coco
RMIT University / ARC CoE for Automated Decision-Making and Society, Australia

Panel 1. 23.

Institutional challenges for shared resources

Chair: Vijay Ramprasad
Details
Session 1. 23.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN255
Reclaiming the Commons of the Sky: the Challenge of Delivery Drones
online
Anna Zenz
University of Western Australia, Australia
Commons and anti-commons in Kapuas Hulu, Indonesia
online
Moira Moeliono and Linda Yuliani
Center for International Forestry Research, Indonesia
Governing Chemical Commons
in-person
Vijay Ramprasad
Williams College, USA

Panel 1. 24.

Market-Based and Hybrid Governance Models

Chair: Anne MacKinnon
Details
Session 1. 24.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOE480
Community-based Environmental Markets (Cbems): a Review of Hybrid Regimes for Natural Resource Governance
in-person
Sergio Villamayor-Tomas1, Tanya Hayes2, Abigail Bennett3, Graham Epstein4, Dan Holland5, Claudia Sattler6, Katrin Prager7, Xiangyu Jia8, Michael Cox9, and Dustin Garrick4
1Dept. of Political Science & ICTA-UAB, Spain, 2Seattle University, United States, 3Michigan State University, United States, 4University of Waterloo, Canada, 5NOAA, United States, 6ZALF, Germany, 7University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom, 8Beijing University, China, 9Dartmouth University, United States
Looking at Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species Through an Interactive Governance Lens.
online
Grace Rusinamhodzi
Independent, Ghana
Water: How Fear of Unilateral Change Drives locally-designed Institutional Change
in-person
Anne MacKinnon1 and Insa Theesfeld2
1University of Wyoming, United States, 2Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Germany

Panel 1. 25.

Social-Ecological Systems and Adaptive Governance

Chair: Jacopo Baggio
Details
Session 1. 25.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS211
An Embedded Model of Adaptive Capacity for the Sustainable Governance of Common Pool Resources
in-person
Jacopo Baggio1, Jacob Freeman2, and Kelsey Larsen1
1University of Central Florida, USA, 2Utah State University, USA
Understanding the Failure of Soil Management in Tunisia: Social-ecological Misfits and Lack of Administrative Capacity
in-person (Theil)
Nora Schütze and Andreas Thiel
University of Kassel, Germany
Shaping Conditions for Commoning Through Adaptive Collaborative Management (ACM) in Indonesia
online
Yanti (T.) Kusumanto1, Micah Fisher2, and Moira Moeliono3
1TYK research & action consulting, The Netherlands, 2Matsunaga Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution, University of Hawaii, Manoa, U.S.A., 3Center for International Forestry Research, Indonesia

Panel 1. 26.

Property rights and collective action in rural China

Chair: Yiqing Su
Details
Session 1. 26. A.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 PM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center NORTH 111
Beyond Property Rights: All Roads Lead to Sustainable Grassland Management
in-person
Lu Yu1, Siyuan Qiu1, Qi Chen1, and Lingling Hou2
1School of Public Affairs, Zhejiang University, China, 2School of Advanced Agricultural Sciences, Peking University, China
Family-based Property Rights, Farm Household Differentiation and Land Transfer
online
Dan Cheng1, Linghui Liu1, and Xinpeng Huang2
1School of Public Administration, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, China, 2Economics and Management School of Wuhan University, China
The Effects of Leadership and Social Capital on the Governance of the Irrigation Commons—-Evidence From China
in-person
Xiaohan Chen and Yiqing Su
Guangxi University, China
Session 1. 26. B.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center NORTH 111
Navigating Tenure Security and Social Identity: Nested Property Rights in state-owned Grassland Governance
in-person
Yuan Liu and Lu Yu
Zhejiang University, China
The Impact of Land Fragmentation on Collective Action of Farmers Under the Impacts of Disaster: Evidence From 902 Rural Households in China’s Border Region
in-person
Yiqing Su and Yuan Xuan
Guangxi University, Nanning, China

Sub-theme 2

Climate Change, Resilience, and the Commons

Theme Details

Global climate change is arguably the most challenging collective action problem of our time, affecting everyone on the planet. It also involves complex dynamics that classic collective action theories struggle to capture, such as power imbalances and disparities in influence. Addressing climate change requires that we consider issues of mitigation, adaptation, and the long-term task of building resilient economies and societies amidst evolving climates and shifting social and technical systems.

In this subtheme, we invite scientists and practitioners to propose presentations on topics including, but not limited to: polycentric approaches to managing climatic commons, carbon markets and carbon offsets, nature-based climate solutions, people-centered and gender-inclusive strategies for adaptation and mitigation, ecosystem restoration, climate-smart agriculture, clean energy cooperatives, collective action and climate resilience, the Earth Regeneration movement, and the power dynamics and contestations in global climate engagements. We seek contributions that connect climate change to collective action and the commons, offering theoretical insights and practical solutions.

Program Committee sub-theme members: Forrest Fleischman, Everisto Mapedza

Panels

Panel 2. 2.

Commoning in response to climate change

co-Chairs: Hillary Smith1 and Alejandro Garcia Lozano2
1University of Maine, 2John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY)
Details
Session 2. 2. A.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOW101
Understanding the Critical Roles of Informal Networks in Addressing the “Hidden” Impacts of Coastal Climate Hazards
in-person
Leslie Acton1, Camilla Witherspoon2, and Alexie Rudman1
1Brown University, USA, 2Southern Oregon Forest Restoration Collaborative, USA
Grassroots Learning Through Indigenous co-design of land-based Tools for Community Economies in Coastal Lake Budi, Chile
online
Alison R. Guzman and Ignacio Krell
Maple, Chile
History, Governance and Restoration of the Biocultural Commons of the Ayllarewe Budi
online
Ignacio Krell
Universidad de Concepcion, Chile
Climate Change in Freshwater Food Commons
in-person
Abigail Bennett and Ben Belton
Michigan State University, USA
Commoning for Coastal Spaces in New York City
in-person
Alejandro Garcia Lozano
John Jay College, City University of New York, United States
Session 2. 2. B.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOW101
Supporting Coastal Commoning with Infrastructures for More Abundant Futures
in-person
Noelle Boucquey and Jessie Fly
Eckerd College, USA
Addressing Climate Change Impacts From African Perspective: African Indigenous Science as a Workable Prospect for Mitigation
in-person
Philip Egbule
University of Delta, Agbor, Nigeria
Commoning for Climate Adaptation in Maine’s Coastal Fisheries
in-person
Hillary Smith
University of Maine, United States
Our Common Coast: more-than-human Community Formations in the Transition Towards a Blue Economy in Tamil Nadu
in-person
Dhruv Gangadharan
Rutgers University, United States of America
Equity-Centered Engagement Through Climate Resilience Policy in Massachusetts
in-person
Shannon Callaham
UMass Amherst, United States

Panel 2. 3.

Relationality and the Climate Commons: Understanding, Feeling, Connecting, and Working with Others

co-Chairs: Raul Lejano1, Marcela Brugnach, Juan-Felipe Ortiz-Riomalo, and Fikret Berkes
1New York University
Details
Session 2. 3. A.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Campus Center 162
Can Relationship Quality Influence the Collective Management of Common Pool Resources?
in-person
Marcela Brugnach1, Dimitri Dubois2, and Stefano Farolfi3
1Basque Centre for Climate Change - BC3, Spain, 2CEE-M, Univ. Montpellier, CNRS, INRAE, SupAgro, France, 3UMR G-Eau, CIRAD, France
Perspective-taking, Social Connection, Norms and Prosocial Behaviour in Natural Resource Management. a Field Study.
in-person
Juan-Felipe Ortiz-Riomalo1, David Ramírez-Ramón2, Stefanie Engel1, and Ann-Kathrin Koessler1
1Department of Environmental Economics, Osnabrück University, Germany, 2London School of Economics, UK
Relationality and the Commons: Theory and Practice
in-person
Raul Lejano1 and Wing Shan Kan2
1New York University / Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong, 2Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong
Frozen Commons for Addressing Climate Change by Converging Different Ways of Knowing
in-person
Vera Kuklina1, Andrey Petrov2, Shauna BurnSilver3, Nikolay Shiklomanov1, John Marty Anderies3, Leah Shaffer3, and Pauline Mnev1
1The George Washington University, United States, 2University of Northern Iowa, United States, 3Arizona State University, United States
Session 2. 3. B.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Campus Center 162
Relationality and Indigenous Knowledge: a Case From the Canadian mid-North
in-person
Fikret Berkes and C. Emdad Haque
University of Manitoba, Canada
Commoning as Lifeway: Some Decolonization Required
in-person
Heather Menzies
Carleton University, CA
Building Institutional Relationships, Transmission of Knowledge and Social Learning for Disaster Risk Reduction and Resilience
in-person
C. Emdad Haque1, Fikret Berkes1, and Helen Ross2
1University of Manitoba, Canada, 2University of Queensland, Australia
Virtual Reality Overcoming Distance for Sustainable Consumption
in-person
Ioana Branga-Peicu1, Ann-Kathrin Koessler2, Hannes Campe1, and Stefanie Engel1
1Osnabrück University, Germany, 2Leibniz University Hannover, Germany

Panel 2. 4.

Community stewardship towards commonization to address dispossessions

co-Chairs: Pranab Choudhury1, Amalendu Jyotishi2, Bhavana Rao3, and Bibhu Nayak4
1Landstack, 2Azim Premji University, 3Foundation of Ecological Security, 4TISS, Hyderabad
Details
Session 2. 4.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOW101
From Contemporary Forest Management to Community Stewarded Management : a Climate Imperative?
in-person
Pranab Ranjan Choudhury1, Anjali Aggarwal1, Steven Lawry2, Naveen Isarapu3, Abhilasha Panda3, and Daiophika Thangkhiew3
1Landstack, India, 2CIFRO, USA, 3FES, India
Are Shepherds Stewards? Learnings From Pastoralists and Forests in Two Indian Landscapes
online
Bhavana Kuchimanchi1, Sajal Kulkarni2, and Purnendu Kavoori3
1Foundation for Ecological Security, India, 2Center for People's Collective, India, 3CENSE, India
Shrinking Commons: Experiencing the Transition
online
Rachanadevi Vaishnav
Tata Institute of Social Sciences, India
Psychological Ownership, Community Stewardship and the Management of the Commons
in-person
Ranjan Kumar Ghosh1, Deepika Yadav1, and Pranab Ranjan Choudhury2
1Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad (IIMA), India, 2Landstack Research and Advisory, India

Panel 2. 5.

Restoring Energy Commons: Adapting Established and Creating New Forms of Collective Action for the Green Energy Transition

co-Chairs: Tobias Haller and Jeanne Feaux de la Croix
University of Bern, Switzerland
Details
Session 2. 5. A.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOW101
Top-Down Vs. Energy Commons: Comparing Electrification Approaches in Traditional Amazonian Communities
in-person
Rafael Lembi and Maria Claudia Lopez
Department of Community Sustainability, Michigan State University, USA
Ocean Commons and MRE Discourses in Indonesia: Potential Tensions, Imagination and Perception
online
Ichsan Rahmanto
Institute of Social Anthropology, University of Bern, Switzerland
Commons, Politics, and Power in Public Power Struggles
in-person
Michi Wenderlich
Independent Scholar, Metro Justice, USA
Calling for a Commons: the Critique of Power in Rural Opposition to Renewable Energy Infrastructure
in-person
Claudine Pied
University of Wisconsin Platteville, United States
Session 2. 5. B.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOW101
Bottom Up or Top Down? Commons, Elites, and Water in Switzerland and Norway
online
Anna Seeger
University of Bern/University Of St Andrews, Switzerland
Decarbonised District Heating: an Emerging Energy Commons?
in-person
Soeren Becker
Marburg University, Germany
Rethinking Energy Commons with Ocean: Marine Renewable Energy Development in Taiwan
online
Yu Sang
University of Bern, Switzerland
Session 2. 5. C.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOW101
Balancing the Energy Commons: Opportunities and Challenges of Timber for the Green Energy Turn in Switzerland
online
Tobias Haller
Institute of Social Anthropology, University Of Bern, Switzerland
Contradictions in Energy Commons Research and Practice
in-person
Matthew Burke
University of Vermont, USA
Policy Frameworks and the Commons: Examining the Role of Renewable Energy Policies in Shaping Energy Commoning Practices in the United States
in-person
Juniper Katz
University of Massachusetts, United States
Agrivoltaics: Weaving Together the Food Commons and Energy Commons
in-person
Karli Moore
Stanford University, USA
Empowering Communities, Democratizing Energy: the Transformative Effects of Rural Energy Communities in Spain
online
Cristina Pérez Sánchez
Institut De Ciència I Tecnologia Ambientals- Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (ICTA-UAB), Spain
Tidal Power in Nova Scotia: Who Is It for and Who Decides?
online
Jeanne Féaux De La Croix
University of Bern, Switzerland

Panel 2. 6.

Agriculture, conservation, and a changing climate

Chair: Bimal Sharma
Details
Session 2. 6.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOW101
Resilience Through Local Knowledge: Analysing Socio-Ecological Production Landscapes (Sepls) in the Agro-Ecological Zones of the Brahmaputra Valley, Assam Plain, India
in-person
Bimal Sharma
University of Canberra, Australia
Understanding Farmer Diversity: a Typology of Conservation Behavior in Indiana to Enhance Cover Crop Adoption
in-person
Mahdi Taraghi and Landon Yoder
O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University, USA
Participatory Governance for Planning and Diffusion of Climate Smart Agriculture by Combining Institutional Analysis and Network of Adjacent Action Situations
online
Md Rezaul Karim1, Andreas Thiel2, Rafiqul Islam3, Farhana Nowrin Oishi4, and Mohammad Anamul Haque4
1Hajee Mohammad Danesh Science and Technology University Dinajpur, Bangladesh &, University of Kassel, Germany, 2University of Kassel, Germany, 3Rafiq Traders Ltd., Dhaka, Bangladesh,4Cosmic Agro Ltd. Uttara, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Managing Lakes as Commons: Stakeholder Priorities and land-use Challenges in Ethiopia
in-person
Alemu Bezie Debay, Dr. Nandika Tsendbazar, and Dr. Erika N Speelman
Laboratory of Geo-information Science and Remote Sensing, Wageningen University and Research

Panel 2. 7.

Communities and energy

Chair: Shannon Callaham
Details
Session 2. 7.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOW101
Powering a Collective Vision for the Energy Transition in Holyoke
in-person
Shannon Callaham and Ximena Aristizabal
UMass Amherst, USA
CSR Signaling and Collective Action: Exploring the Role of Trust in Fostering Prosocial Responses to Climate Challenges
in-person
Thomas Familia
Arizona State University, US
Energy Commoning as a Public Policy Analysis Tool: Lessons From the History of Electricity Governance in Ontario
online
Derya Tarhan1 and Julie MacArthur2
1University of Guelph, Canada, 2 Royal Roads University, Canada

Panel 2. 10.

Knowledge, power, money and the commons

Chair: Natasha Hulst
Details
Session 2. 10.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOW245
Climate Finance and Environmental Justice: Navigating the Commons for Sustainable Development in Vulnerable Regions
in-person
Ji Qi and Haoqi Qian
Fudan University, China
Relationalized Finance: Supporting Commons and Community Resilience in Amsterdam
in-person
Natasha Hulst and David Bollier
Schumacher Center, United States
Leveraging Informal Governance to Enhance Climate Resilience in African Urban Settings
online
Lilian Namuma S. Kongani
The University of Cape Town, South Africa and The University of Nairobi, South Africa
Unlocking Trillions in Funding: Rethinking Governance of National Money Systems
online
Sam Hummel
Duke University, United States
To feel(think) Our Own Research as Researchers
online
Shashank Poudel and Juliana Neira
University of Vermont, United States
Formulating Credible Climate Commitments in the European Union: the Role of Ex Ante Commitment Devices in the Formulation of Nationally Determined Contributions
in-person
Leonardo Cunha Silva
University of Sao Paulo, Brazil

Panel 2. 12.

Water in a changing world

Chair: Tamee Albrecht
Details
Session 2. 12.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOW101
The Role of Institutional Dependencies in U.S. Water Utility Adaptation
in-person
Tamee Albrecht, Alexandra Smialek, and Anita Milman
Colorado State University, USA; University Of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
Tracing Principles of Adaptive Management in German Water Management Strategies – Understanding the Potential of Institutional Design
online
Malin Delfs and Laura Herzog
University of Osnabrück, Germany

Sub-theme 3

Public Policy, the Commons and State-Reinforced Self-Governance

Theme Details

There is a strong relationship between the study of the commons, collective action, and public policy analysis. Public policy is often justified as a means for governments to incentivize individuals to act in the public interest, which may involve creating new types of commons, fostering collective action, and/or regulating these activities through state mechanisms. Many analyses of commons governance explore the interaction between state and non-state actors, considering both informal norms and formal rules that enable diverse forms of cooperation to address complex social-ecological dilemmas, often referred to as state-reinforced self-governance.

This subtheme encourages participants to submit presentation abstracts that explore a range of topics related to commons governance, the State, and public policy. Potential topics include institutional design, polycentric governance, co-management (e.g., co-provision and co-production), and interventions that facilitate diverse outcomes at the intersection of public policy and the commons. We are particularly interested in submissions that advance policy theory, methodology, or practice.

Program Committee sub-theme members: Daniel DeCaro, Tanya Heikkila, Ilkhom Soliev

Panels

Panel 3. 1.

Collective Action Around Negative Externalities in Agroecosystems

co-Chairs: Landon Yoder1, Minwoo Ahn2, Courtney Hammond Wagner3, and Pranay Ranjan4
1Indiana University, 2University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, 3USDA ARS, Burlington, VT, 4Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ
Details
Session 3. 1.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS140
Theoretical Explanations for Farmer Cooperation to Reduce Negative Externalities in Agroecosystems
in-person
Landon Yoder
Indiana University, USA
Collective Action Dilemmas in Agricultural Drainage and Irrigation Systems – a Property Rights Perspective
in-person
Pranay Ranjan1 and Vishal Narain2
1Northern Arizona University, USA, 2Management Development Institute Gurgaon, India
Why Do Farmers Use the Courts? a Content Analysis of Groundwater Crisis in California and Arizona
in-person
Minwoo Ahn
University of Arizona, United States

Panel 3. 3.

Restoring the Commons: Linking ecosystem restoration to people and institutions

co-Chairs: Forrest Fleischman1 and Ida Djenontin2
1University of Minnesota, 2Penn State University
Details
Session 3. 3.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS140
The Administrative History of Commons Restoration in the Western Himalayas of India
in-person
Forrest Fleischman
University of Minnesota - Twin Cities, United States
Reconciling Global and Local Benefits of Forest Restoration: a Shared Interdisciplinary Perspective
in-person
Stephanie Mansourian
University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Role of Actors in Enabling nature-based Conservation and Restoration of Urban Commons in the Global South
online
Arvind Lakshmisha1 and Raksha Balakrishna2
1Azim Premji University, India, 2Arizona State University, USA
Examining the Institutional and Power Dynamics in Landscape Restoration Schemes in Ghana
online
Faisal Elias and Ida Nadia Sedjro
Pennsylvania State University, United States
Participatory Action Research to Promote Commoning Practices in the Restoration of Wetlands in Indonesia
in-person
Dyah Puspitaloka1, Herry Purnomo2, Sonya Dyah Kusumadewi2, Lila Juniyanti3, Beni Okarda2, Agus Andrianto2 and Nining Liswanti2
1CIFOR-ICRAF, Dartmouth College, United States, 2CIFOR-ICRAF, Indonesia, 3CIFOR-ICRAF, Research Center For Population BRIN, Indonesia
Ecological Restoration or Reforestation: Conflicts around Tree Planting in the Western Ghats, India
in-person
Krithi Sundararaman
O. P. Jindal Global University, Sonipat, India

Panel 3. 4.

Mapping Commons-State Partnerships Practices: Neighbourhoods as Nexus of Sovereignty

co-Chairs: Torange Khonsari1 and Gifty Amma Adusei2
1London Metropolitan University, 2Daniel DeCaro
Details
Session 3. 4. B.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Campus Center 162
Towards a Commons-Public Partnership: Redistributing the Power of Political Decision Making
in-person
Torange Khonsari
London Metropolitan University, United Kingdom
Vogelmorn: Wellington Commoning Practices 6 Years on (Please Use This Version)
online
Sophie Jerram
Te Herenga/ Waka Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Deliberative Democracy and Water Governance: the Case of Contratti Di Fiume (River Contracts)
in-person
Eleonora Ciscato and Filippo Itolli
University of Milan, Italy
Balancing Power in Urban Commons: Lessons From U.S. Neighborhood Revitalization Policies
in-person
Gifty Amma Adusei
University of South Alabama, United States
Undisciplined Encounters in the Neighbourhood
in-person
Mehrdad Seyf
Architectural Association, United Kingdom
Session 3. 4. A.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS140
Everyday Law in the Commons-Public-Entanglement
in-person
Gustav Nielsen
University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
The Changing Place of People, Policy and Practice in the Speculative City: 3 Cases of Urban Regeneration in London
in-person
Tim Peake
London Metropolitan University, United Kingdom
From Ineluctability to Possibilities
in-person
Silvana Segapeli1 and Valter Cavallaro2
1Ecole Nationale Supérieure D'Architecture De Saint-Etienne, Research Unit "Architectures Et Transformations", France, 2Independent, Italy

Panel 3. 5.

Advancing an Institutional Grammar of the "State" in State-Reinforced Self-Governance

co-Chairs: Daniel DeCaro1, Emmanuel Frimpong Boamah2, Ute Brady3, Christopher Frantz4, Tanya Heikkila5, and Saba Siddiki6
1University of Louisville, 2University at Buffalo, 3Arizona State University, 4Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 5UC Denver, 6Syracuse University
Details
Session 3. 5.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HASA0124
Analyzing State Reinforced Self-Governance Principles Using the Institutional Grammar: a Case Study of U.S. Fishery Management Councils
in-person
Shuping Wang1, Saba Siddiki1, Daniel DeCaro2 and Ute Brady3
1Syracuse University, United States, 2University of Louisville, United States, 3Arizona State University, United States
Conceptualizing Learning and Constitutional Decision-Making in the Evolution of Self-Governing Systems: an Agent-Based Model of Boundedly Rational Constitutional Agents
in-person
Daniel DeCaro1, Christopher Franz2, Emmanuel Frimpong Boamah3, Marci DeCaro1 and Saba Siddiki4
1University of Louisville, United States, 2Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway, 3University at Buffalo, United States, 4Syracuse University, United States

Panel 3. 6.

Adaptive Governance and Innovative Solutions in the Commons

Chair: Nicholas Poggioli
Details
Session 3. 6.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Campus Center 162
Central Banks and the Commons: Insights From the Peruvian Experience
online
Jose Tavara
Pontificia Universidad Catolica Del Perú, Peru
Solving the Sustainability Journey Problem: a Novel Measure of Whether an Organization Has Achieved Ecological Sustainability
online
Nicholas Poggioli
Appalachian State University, United States Of America
Polycentric Governance of Climate Adaptation – Constraints and Challenges
online
Michael Spencer
Monash University, Australia

Panel 3. 7.

Barriers and Opportunities in Polycentric, State-Reinforced Governance of the Commons

Chair: Andreas Thiel
Details
Session 3. 7.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS140
Collaborative Watershed Management: a Q-methodology Analysis of the Drivers and Barriers to Collective Action in France
in-person
Laurence Amblard and Lison Lepilleur
INRAE, France
Modernization of Forest Commons During the Six Decades in Japan: Iriai Forests and Fields From Industrialization Era to post-industrialization Era
in-person
Takuya Takahashi1, Koji Matsushita2, Noriko Sato3, Gakuto Takamura4 and Utako Yamashita5
1The University Of Shiga Prefecture, Japan, 2Kyoto University, Japan, 3Kyushu University, Japan, 4Ritsumeikan University, Japan, 5Tokyo University Of Agriculture, Japan
Reclaiming Water: the Struggle for Commons-Based Governance in Naples
online
Vanessa Mascia Turri
University of Milan-Bicocca, Italy
Modes of Coordination and Performance in Polycentric Governance: Disentangling Complexity
in-person
Andreas Thiel1, Elizabeth Baldwin2, Mark Stephan3 and Sergio Villamayor Tomas4
1University Of Kassel, Germany, 2University Of Arizona, USA, 3Washington State University, USA, 4University of Barcelona, Spain

Panel 3. 8.

Behavioral Foundations of Collective Action in the Commons

Chair: Steffen Schneider
Independent, Germany
Details
Session 3. 8.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS140
Exploring the Perceived Legitimacy of Citizens’ Juries in the Context of Environmental Policy: a Survey Experiment in Colombia
online
Marco Nilgen, Maximilian Burger and Björn Vollan
Philipps-Universitét Marburg, Germany
Research on Public Affairs Governance Practices and Paths Under the Perspective of Interactive Ritual Chains
online
Jiayi Xu and Junzi Li
Huazhong Agricultural University, China
CPR Governance, Democratic Quality and Legitimacy: a Conceptual Framework
in-person
Steffen Schneider
Independent, Germany

Panel 3. 9.

Decision-Making in Social-Ecological Systems and Commons Dilemmas

Chair: Jessica Williams
Details
Session 3. 9.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS140
The Potential of Collective Action in Promoting Sustainable Rangeland Management:Evidence From Pastoral China
in-person
Lu Yu1, Shuang Wu1, and Chuan Liao2
1School of Public Affairs, Zhejiang University, China, 2Department of Global Development, Cornell University, United States
Determinants of Community Collective Action in a REDD+ Project
online
Ayako Ido
Nagoya University, Japan
Assessing NGO Interventions for Community Welfare and Conservation in Amazonian Buffer Zones: a Mixed-Methods Study
online
Isabel Guerrero, Anthony Soto, and Luis Quispe
Pontificia Universidad Católica Del Perú (PUCP), Peru;
Participatory Approaches to Ecosystem Service Assessment: Integrating Community Assessment and Values in Revitalising peri-urban Systems
in-person
Jessica Williams
Centre for Civil Society and Governance, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, SAR, China

Panel 3. 10.

Roundtable discussion: Vincent Ostrom’s Contributions

co-Chairs: Anas Malik1, Ron Oakerson2, Keith Taylor3, and Mike McGinnis4
>1Xavier University, USA, 2Houghton College, USA, 3UC Davis, USA, 4Indiana University Bloomington, USA
Details
Session 3. 10.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Campus Center 163
 

Panel 3. 12.

Roundtable Discussion: Contemplating Opportunities and Challenges in the Integrative Study of State-Reinforced Self-Governance via the Institutional Grammar

co-Chairs: Daniel DeCaro1, Emmanuel Frimpong Boamah2, Ute Brady3, Christopher Frantz4, Tanya Heikkila5, and Saba Siddiki6
1University of Louisville, 2University at Buffalo, 3Arizona State University, 4Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 5UC Denver, 6Syracuse University
Details
Session 3. 12.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Campus Center 163
 

Sub-theme 4

The Nonprofit Sector and the Commons

Theme Details

At the broadest level, our willingness to give time and money for the public good creates a commons that forms the foundation of civil society. This willingness to give manifests itself in many different governance arrangements, including international nongovernmental organizations, nonprofit service providers, philanthropic institutions, social enterprises, and many others. Often these operate outside the realm of either the market nor the state. Some of these institutional arrangements rely on donor appeals, giving traditions, or endowments, while others rely on government funding to deliver services. This theme explores the institutional arrangements for giving time and/or money and how they help or hinder civil society. We invite dialog between and among scholars and practitioners focusing on commons, commoning, and governance arrangements for giving for the public good.

We welcome submissions that explore a range of institutional arrangements for giving time and/or money, including diverse and novel formal and informal institutions used to govern philanthropic and voluntary resources. Additionally, we welcome scholarship that considers how current institutions aggrieve or deplete such resources. Contributions that explore how giving is expressed through various institutional arrangements, both historical and contemporary, are highly encouraged. The theme leaders welcome diverse theoretical and methodological approaches.

Program Committee sub-theme members: Brenda Bushouse, Brent Never, Anas Malik

Panels

Panel 4. 1.

On Giving and Taking: Unpacking ‘support’ for coastal and ocean commons

Chair: Aarthi Sridhar
Dakshin Foundation
Details
Session 4. 1.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 137
The Give and Take of India’s Blue Economy: Development and Resistance in the Aghanashini River Estuary
online
Adam Jadhav
American Museum of Natural History, USA
Between Khoti and Cooperative: Practices of Commoning in Coastal Bengal
online
Shalini Iyengar
Yale University, United States
Supporting Women in Fisheries: How ‘Giving’ Shapes Gendered Commons Governance in Coastal Tamil Nadu
online
Nayana Udayashankar and Aarthi Sridhar
Dakshin Foundation, India
Giving Trends in India’s Coastal and Ocean Commons
online
Meera Oommen
Dakshin Foundation, India

Panel 4. 3.

Faith-based initiatives and eco-social commons

Chair: Anas Malik
Xavier University
Details
Session 4. 3.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Campus Center 162
The Morality of Money Creation
online
Sam Hummel
Duke University, United States
Religious Norm Entrepreneurship for Covenantal Stewardship of eco-social Commons: Al Mizan and Laudato Si
in-person
Anas Malik
Xavier University, USA
Beyond Interest: Partnership-Based Financial Models for Regenerating the Commons, with an Application to Housing in Canada
in-person
Saad Malik1 and Anas Malik2
1Independent, Canada, 2Xavier University, USA
Waqf Beyond Borders: Governance and Sustainability in Non-Islamic Contexts
in-person
Mohannad Mofawaz
Indiana University, United States

Panel 4. 4.

Co-creating Social Value and Innovation

Chair: Brenda Bushouse
Details
Session 4. 4.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN101
Nonprofits’ Participation in co-governance: an Analysis and a Typology
in-person
JiaLiang Xu1, HongQing Zeng1, Yujie Zhang2, QiWei Zhang1, and Yuan Tian1
1Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China, 2Chongqing University, China
Exploring Instrumental and Expressive Dimensions of Social Value Creation in a Rural Irish Social Enterprise
online
David Coffey and Sheila Cannon
Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
University-NGO Collaborations for the co-creation and Scaling of Social Innovations
in-person
Vivian Chu and Jessica Williams
Centre for Civil Society and Governance, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR
The Power to Unmute: Collective Action in Response to Pandemic Closures
in-person
Brenda Bushouse1, Eric Griffith2, and Tamara Keshecki1
1University Of Massachusetts Amherst, USA, 2Duke University, USA

Panel 4. 6.

Philanthropic Commons

Chair: Brenda Bushouse
Details
Session 4. 6.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN101
Sustaining Local Philanthropic Commons Through Community Leadership: the Case of Community Foundations
in-person
Viviana Wu
University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States
Higher Education Giving in the US: the Commons and the “Cliff”
online Blomquist
Genevieve Shaker and William Blomquist
Indiana University, United States
Place Matters: Geographic Concentration in the Philanthropic Commons
in-person
Brent Never1 and Drew Westberg2
1University of Missouri - Kansas City, United States, 2Coe College, United States

Sub-theme 5

Knowledge Commons

Theme Details

Knowledge Commons has become a standard and growing sub-theme at IASC conferences, and this continues in IASC 2025. The Knowledge Commons refers to fora that facilitate the sharing of data, information, and technical and cultural knowledge. This type of commons includes shared scientific research, data repositories, cultural heritage, and created or creative works, including knowledge commons that operate as part of or adjacent to natural resource commons.

In this sub-theme we welcome submissions on a wide variety of topics including: open scholarship; open source software and hardware governance; open educational resources; open licensing; open data and data governance (including data pools, data trusts, data privacy and data security); internet commons and platform cooperativism; Smart Cities; commons governance of AI and other intelligence-generating systems; open science/science commons (including sharing of information in health and medicine); indigenous knowledge and science; and the sharing, preservation or protection of cultural and heritage commons. Other related areas not listed here are also welcome.  

Program Committee sub-theme members: Melanie Dulong de Rosnay, Brett Frischman, Michael Madison, Kathy Strandburg, Christine Turner

Panels

Panel 5. 1.

Building alternative seed commons: new challenges and international perspectives

co-Chairs: Armelle Maze1, Fabien Girard2, Maria Gerullis3, Cathleen McCluskey4, and Morgane Leclerq5
1INRAE, Université Paris-Saclay, 2Université de Grenoble, France, 3Universitât Gottingen, 4University of Wisconsin-Madison, Organic seed alliance, 5Université de Laval
Details
Session 5. 1.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS231
Cultivated Agrobiodiversity Beyond the Human and non-human Divide. a Legal Pluralism Perspective
in-person
Morgane Leclercq
Université de Sherbrooke, Canada
Data Blanks by Design: Intellectual Property Rights Used on U.S. Maize, Restrictions on Public Research, and Implications
online
Cathleen McCluskey1,2 and William Tracy2
1Organic Seed Alliance, United States, 2University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States
Participatory Breeding of Phaseolus Coccineus: Strengthening Collective Action in Favour of Small Farmer Agency and Crop Variety Resilience
online
Nury Galindo
Sustainability Science Graduate Program, National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), Mexico
A Biocultural Approach to the Seed Commons
in-person
Fabien Girard
Université Grenoble Alpes, France
A Framework for Coevolution in Modern Knowledge Systems: Mainstreaming Our Understanding of Human-Crop Coevolution by Integrating Cultural Evolution in Seed Systems
online
Maria Gerullis
University of Göttingen, Germany
Wild Native Plants: Origin Labelling as a Paradigm Shift for Seed Certification. an Exploratory Analysis in France
in-person
Armelle Mazé1, Juan Fernandez-Manjarres2, and Nathalie Frascaria-Lacoste3
1INRAE, UMR SADAPT, Université Paris-Saclay, France, 2CNRS, ESE, Université Paris-Saclay, France, 3AgroParisTech, ESE, Université Paris-Saclay, France
Common Seed Diversity and Its Inseparable People
online
Libertad Castro-Colina
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico

Panel 5. 2.

Geographical Indications as Global Knowledge Commons – new challenges in the context of agroecological transition and climate change

co-Chairs: Armelle Maze1, Marie Odile Noziîres2, and Matthew J. Zinsli3
1INRAE University Paris-Saclay, 2Virginie Baritaux and Etienne Polge (INRAE, France), 3University of Wisconsin–Madison - University of Quito
Details
Session 5. 2.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS231
Climate Change and Collective Rules: How Are Agricultural Practices Changing? the Case of the Picodon PDO
in-person
Mathilde Geay-Galitre1, Pierre Le Gall2, Claire Aubron3, and Marie-Odile Nozières-Petit1
1INRAE-UMR SELMET, France, 2Isara Lyon-Avignon, Laboratoire D’Etudes Rurales, France, 3Institut Agro Montpellier-UMR SELMET, France
Challenges with Collaborative Promotional Efforts: Development of a Certification Mark/ Geographical Indication for a Fruit Industry in the United States
in-person
Chris Bardenhagen
Michigan State University, United States
The Opportunities and Challenges of Collective Territorial Valorization Through Geographical Indication: the Case of Galápagos Islands Coffee
in-person
Matthew Zinsli1 and Rafael Villota2
1University Of Wisconsin–Madison And Universidad San Francisco De Quito, United States, 2Universidad San Francisco De Quito, Ecuador
Geographical Indications as Sustainable Territorial Commons? Expanding the IAD/SES Framework at Landscape Levels.
in-person
Armelle Mazé1,2,3, Virginie Baritaux4,5, Mathilde Geay Galitre1,2,6, Etienne Polge1,5, and Marie-Odile Nozières-Petit1,6
1INRAE, France2UMR SADAPT, France, 3Université Paris-Saclay, France, 4VetAgroSup, France, 5UMR Territoires, France, 6UMR SELMET, France; 4INRAE, UMR Territoires, France; 5INRAE, UMR SELMET, France
Geographical Indication “Ceylon Tea”: a collective response to the crises in the tea industry in Sri Lanka?
in-person
Claire Bernard-Mongin1 and Aurore Lunven2
CIRAD, France

Panel 5. 3.

Towards a pedagogy of the commons

co-Chairs: Alekos Pantazis1, Yannis Pechtelidis1, and Noah De Lissovoy2
1University of Thessaly, 2The University of Texas at Austin
Details
Session 5. 3.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN 155
Bridging Knowledge Commons and Educational Commons: Exploring Collaborative Approaches in Libraries
online
Antoine Henry
Lille University, France
How Can Education Be re-imagined as an Institution of the Commons?
in-person
Alekos Pantazis1, Noah De Lissovoy2, and Giannis Pechtelidis1
1The University of Thessaly, Greece, 2The University of Texas at Austin, USA
Ecologies of Eros: the Desire Called Utopia and the Educational Commons
online
Graham Slater
Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, United States
Reimagining Educational Roles Through Common-based Pedagogical Practices
online
Stelios Pantazidis
University of Thessaly, Greece
Schools as Educational Common Places in an Era of Superdiversity
online
Jordi Collet
University of Vic. Barcelona, Spain

Panel 5. 4.

Cultural Commons

co-Chairs: Valeria Morea1, Erwin Dekker, and Carolina Dalla Chiesa
1Erasmus University Rotterdam
Details
Session 5. 4. A.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Campus Center 174
Informal Artistic Practices as Cultural Commons: Insights From the Practice of ‘Associazione Bastione’ and the Occupation of Cavallerizza Reale in Turin, Italy
online
Matilde Ferrero
Magna Graecia University at Catanzaro, Italy
Cinema as a Commons: the Invention of Het Filmlokaal in Rotterdam, NL
online
Erik Vermunt
Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands
The Rise of the Commons, Cultural Spaces and Policy in Southern Europe: Why Did This Happen and Why Do We Care?
online
Matina Magkou1, Alice Borchi2, and Maud Pélissier3
1University Côte d'Azur, France, 2University of Leeds, United Kingdom, 3Université de Toulon, France
It Takes a Village to Care for Heritage: Italian Practices of Collaborative Cultural Management
online
Alessandro Gaballo
Università Ca' Foscari di Venezia, Italy
Practical Knowledge in Cultural Commons. a Study of the Maker Community in Delft
online
Prokop Novak and Valeria Morea
Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands
The Implications of Embodied Knowledge on the Valuation of Creative Craft Goods
online
Marleen Hofland-Mol1 and Anna Mignosa1,2
1School of History, Culture and Communication, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; 2Department of Humanities, University of Catania, Italy
Session 5. 4. B.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN101
The Organisation Side of the Commons: the Contribution of the Collectivist Format and the Incentive Problem of (Cultural) Participation
in-person
Carolina Dalla Chiesa
Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands
What Is Cultural Within Cultural Commons?
online
Lyudmila Petrova1 and Marilena Vecco2
1Center for Research in Arts and Economics (CREARE), The Netherlands, 2Burgundy School of Business, France
Rethinking Cultural Commons: Is There a Research Agenda?
online
Enrico Bertacchini1 and Peter Gould2
1University of Turin, Italy, 2University of Indiana Bloomington, USA
Copyright Infringement and AI: A Cultural Commons Perspective
online
Simon Sun
The IAD-NAAS Framework as a Tool for Evaluating UNESCO Site Governance
online
Giacomo Vasumi1 and Enrico Bertacchini2
1La Sapienza, University of Rome, Italy, 2Universitá di Torino, Italy

Panel 5. 5.

Understanding Governance Across Peer-Produced Knowledge Commons' Lifecycles

co-Chairs: Sneha Narayan1, Benjamin Mako Hill2, and Sohyeon Hwang3
1Carleton College, 2University of Washington, 3Princeton University
Details
Session 5. 5.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 137
Centralization and the Impact of Community Stature on English Wikipedia’s Dispute Resolution Process
in-person
Sneha Narayan
Carleton College, USA
The Growth and Decline of Digital Knowledge Commons
in-person
Benjamin Mako Hill
The Introduction of README Files and Contributing Guidelines in FLOSS Peer-Production
in-person
Matthew Gaughan
Northwestern University, United States

Panel 5. 6.

Power, Participation, and Heterogeneity in Knowledge Commons

co-Chairs: Michael Madison1, Brett Frischmann2, Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo3, and Katherine Strandburg4
1University of Pittsburgh School of Law, 2Villanova Law, 3Illinois iSchool, 4NYU
Details
Session 5. 6.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS231
Collective Action and Public Participation in AI: Bridging Frameworks for Societal Impact
online
Inna Kouper1,2, Craig Jolley2, Andrew Merluzzi2, Stefani Falconi2, and Shachee Doshi2
1Indiana University, USA, 2USAID, USA
The Grammar of Polycentricity in International Conservation Governance
in-person
Ute Brady1, Beckett Sterner1, and Heidi Cooke2
1Arizona State University, USA, 2Purdue University, USA
Open Data Leading to Closed Knowledge Commons? Responding to the Commodification of Open Data
online
Ramya Chandrasekhar and Melanie Dulong de Rosnay
Centre for Internet and Society, CNRS, France
Extending the Bundle of Rights to Digital Commons Governance
online
Valérian Guillier and Mélanie Dulong de Rosnay
Center for Internet and Society at the French National Center for Scientific Research (CIS-CNRS), France
An entry-door for Polycentricity in the GKC Framework: External Actors’ Involvement in Rulemaking for Protecting Origin Products in Italy and France
in-person
Flavia Guerrieri
Laboratoire d’Etude et de Recherche sur l’Economie, les Politiques et les Syst&eacut;mes Sociaux (LEREPS), Sciences Po Toulouse, Université de Toulouse, France
Institutional Leadership and Institutional Dynamics: Two Studies Over Thousands of Communities
in-person
Seth Frey, Beril Bulat, and Eleveny Chen
UC Davis, USA

Panel 5. 7.

Climate/Bioregional/agricultural knowledge commons

co-Chairs: Bill Baue and Rodger Mattlage
Details
Session 5. 7. A.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS231
Designing and Stewarding Federated Bioregional Knowledge Commons
in-person
Bill Baue, Rodger Mattlage with David Bollier, Magenta Ceiba, and Jessica Zartler
r3.0 (Redesign for Resilience & Regeneration), United States
Session 5. 7. B.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS231
A multi-pronged Approach to Increasing the Accessibility of Information Coastal Climate Change: Early Lessons From a Transdisciplinary community-engaged Project
in-person
Alexie Rudman and Fana Gizaw
Brown University, USA
The Role of Agrarian Communities in Governing Lake Cerknica Through a blue-green Infrastructure Approach
in-person
Matjač Hribar
Faculty of Civil and Geodetic Engineering at the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
Kachchh’s Agropastoral Weavers, Environmental Imaginaries and New Knowledge Commons in a Frontier of Capitalist Expansion
in-person
Dolly Daftary
University of Massachusetts Boston, USA
Learning in Small Peasant Resistance and Dispossession of Rural Commons in Indonesia
online
Hasriadi Masalam
Independent, Indonesia

Panel 5. 8.

Digital Knowledge Commons and Intellectual Property

Chair: Greg Bloom
Details
Session 5. 8.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS231
Emergence of Digital Commons in Indian Agriculture: the Role of Public Policy
in-person
Soutrik Basu and Anupam Kumar
School of Public Policy - IIT Delhi, India
The “Anticommons” Phenomenon in the Field of Intellectual Property Rights in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area and Its Legal Thinking
in-person
Jiagui Li
Macao Polytechnic University, China

Panel 5. 9.

The Commons and Education

Chair: Melissa Awbrey
Details
Session 5. 9.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS231
The Educational Commons: Transformative Learning with Love and Care
in-person
Melissa Awbrey
Independent/Land to Sea Network, USA
Addressing the Challenge of Governing the US Educational Knowledge Commons When Stakeholders’ Goals, Interests, and Resources Are Misaligned
in-person
Elisabeth Sylvan
Brown University, USA
The Study of the Knowledge Commons in Latin America: Barriers and Bridges
in-person
Esther Bravo-Govea
National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico

Sub-theme 6

Transdisciplinary Collaborations for the Commons

Theme Details

Many commons scholars, especially those engaged in field research, collaborate with local communities, Indigenous Peoples, community-based organizations, NGOs, and other non-academic partners to develop and implement their research, advancing both theory and practice. This co-created work has significant implications for the knowledge and information generated. In this subtheme, we will delve into the intricacies of such collaborations, asking the following types of questions: What goals are pursued and achieved, and for whom? How are these collaborations perceived by different partners, and how can they be improved? What challenges and opportunities arise in these collaborations? How can successful collaborations be replicated or scaled up?

We welcome contributions from scholars and practitioners interested in exploring transdisciplinarity across various contexts, experiences, and perspectives. Themes of interest include, but are not limited to:  methods, challenges and limitations of transdisciplinary work, co-production in community-engaged work and science-policy-society engagements, the dynamics of participation, the influence of power relations and asymmetries, and the impact of transdisciplinary commons research on sustainability and other important outcomes.

Program Committee sub-theme members: Graham Epstein, Mateja Nenadovic, Ida Djenontin

Panels

Panel 6. 1.

Transdisciplinary research and the commons: addressing communication and worldviews gaps between academia and local communities in Latin America

co-Chairs: Luisa Galindo1, Emilie Dupuits, Adriana Saldaña-Espejel, Micaela Trimble, Estrella Chevez, and Paúl Cisneros
1Red de Investigación Participativa en América Latina
Details
Session 6. 1. A.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN101
Community of Practice as a Learning Approach to Address Threats to Collective Decisions About Nature
online
Emma Villaseñor1, Malena Oliva2, Albert Chan3, Alvaro Mena4, Sara Oliveros3, Yamili Chan3, Mariana Ortiz3, Rafael Lopez4, Roberto Sánchez5, Teresa Figueroa5, and Isabel Maldonado6
1INECOL, México, 2LANCIS‚ÄëUNAM, México, 3U Yich Lu'um, México, 4Ka Kuxtal Much' Meyaj, México, 5Kanan, Derechos Humanos, México, 6Independiente, México
Collective Weaving for Advocacy
online
Irina Llamas-Torres1, Luciana Porter-Bolland1, Emma Villaseñor1, and Tejedores de Territorios CII2
1Instituto de Ecología, A.C., México, 2CII Tejedores de Territorios, México
Communication Challenges and Opportunities When scaling-up Participatory Research: Lessons From a national-level Project on Artisanal Fisheries Adaptation
online
Micaela Trimble1,2, Diana Cervantes1, Emilie Dupuits3, Gerardo Fernández4, Luisa Galindo5, Francisco Malfatti6, Gastón Martínez6, Silvia Morales1, Soledad Pasquariello6, Gonzalo Pérez7, Alberto Pierotti8, and Adriana Saldaña-Espejel9
1Universidad de la República (Udelar), Uruguay, 2 SARAS Institute, Uruguay, 3Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador, 4SUNTMA, Uruguay, 5La Fundación Humedal La Conejera, Colombia, 6CURE-Udelar, Uruguay, 7Universidad Tecnológica Metropolitana, Chile, 8Municipio de Salinas, Uruguay, 9En Comunidad y con los Ecosistemas, Mexico
The Net-Map Tool for Participatory Social Network Analysis as a Communication Tool in Transdisciplinary Projects – Lessons From Latin America
online
Barbara Schröter
Research Institute for Regional and Urban Development (ILS), Germany
Session 6. 1. B.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN101
Shared Narratives: Exploring Pathways to Strengthen Communication in Latin American Transdisciplinary Research
in-person
Luisa Galindo1,2, Estrella Chévez2, and Paúl Cisneros3
1Fundación Humedal La Conejera, Colombia, 2Red de Investigación Participativa en América Latina, 3Warner College of Natural Resources, Colorado State University, United States
What Do Rural Youth Dream of? Agroecological Transitions and Rural Youth Leadership in Andean Hydrosocial Territories of Ecuador
in-person
Emilie Dupuits1, Pablo Pomboza2, Alison Diandra Sillo Chacha1, and Flor Guamán González1
1Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador, 2Universidad Tecnica de Ambato, Ecuador
Equity in Action: Empowering Indigenous Women Scholars in Mexico Through STEM to Revitalize the Commons
in-person
Francisco Marmolejo Cossío1, Michelle González Amador2, Tilsa Oré Mónago3, Rubén Martínez Cárdenas4, and Imelda Flores Vazquez5
1Harvard University, United States, 2Wageningen University, Netherlands, 3Rice University, United States, 4University of York, United Kingdom, 5The Cigna Group, United States
Transdisciplinary Research in/with the Communes of Rural Ecuador
online
Angus Lyall
Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador

Panel 6. 2.

Long-term co-production of commons governance: Lessons from Mexico's 10-year partnership among fishers, practitioners, and researchers

co-Chairs: Mateja Nenadovic1 and Xavier Basurto2
1University of Rhode Island, 2Duke University
Details
Session 6. 2.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS231
Different Ways to Measure Changes in the Process of Strengthening Fisheries Organizations: a Collaboration for the co-production of Knowledge
online
Bibiana Ruiz Gala1, Hudson Weaver2, Mateja Nenadovic3, Salvador Rodriguez Van Dyck1, and Xavier Basurto4
1Sociedad de Historia Natural Niparajá A.C., Mexico, 2Duke University, USA, 3University of Rhode Island, USA, 4Stanford University, USA
What Have We Learned From Each Other? Lessons From a Decade of co-production of Knowledge and policy-making Among Academics, Civil Society Actors, and Fishers
in-person
Xavier Basurto1, Jose Luis Carrillo2, Hudson Weaver3, Mateja Nenadovic4, Bibiana Ruiz Gala5, and Salvador Rodriguez Van Dyck5
1Stanford University, USA; 2Confederación Mexicana de Cooperativas Pesqueras y Acuícolas, Mexico; 3Duke University, USA; 4Univer+O567sity of Rhode Island, USA; 5Sociedad de Historia Natural Niparajá A.C., Mexico
Assessing the Performance of a Program to Strengthen small-scale Fishing Cooperative Functionality in Mexico
in-person
Edward Wintergalen1, Hudson Weaver2, Bibiana Ruiz Gala3, Lorena Ortiz Martinez4, Salvador Rodriguez Van Dyck3, Xavier Basurto5, and Mateja Nenadovic6
1University of Miami, USA; 2Duke University, USA; 3Sociedad de Historia Natural Niparajá A.C., Mexico; 4Confederación Mexicana de Cooperativas Pesqueras y Acuícolas, Mexico; 5Stanford University, USA; 6University of Rhode Island, USA
Organization and Management of Fisheries common-pool Resources in the Mexican Central Pacific
in-person
Adán Aranda-Fragoso1, Alicia Castillo1, Bárbara Ayala1, Xavier Basurto2, and Mateja Nenadovic3
1Ecosystem and Sustainability Research Institute (IIES), National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), México, 2Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, USA, 3Department of Marine Affairs, University of Rhode Island, USA

Panel 6. 3.

Learning from the Commons to improve conservation action

co-Chairs: J.T. Erbaugh1, Aji Anggoro2, Helena Cardenas1, Nikki DeMello1, Alexis Nakandakari1, Nabin Pradhan3, Priya Shyamsundar1, and Nicholas Wolfe1
1The Nature Conservancy, 2Yayasan Konservasi Alam Nusantara, 3University of Michigan
Details
Session 6. 3.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOE480
Could Commoning Unlock the Potential of Integrated Landscape Approaches
in-person
Xiao Lu Wang1 and Wai Fung Lam2
1Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong SAR; 2The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR
A Multi-Level Cultural Landscape Approach to Understanding Governance Institutions in Community-based Conservation Organizations in Northern Kenya
in-person
Tom Currie
University of Exeter, United Kingdom
The Survival of co-management Initiatives Varies Across Sets of social-ecological Features That Drive Collective Action
in-person
Maria Ignacia Rivera
Instituto de Socio-Ecología Costera, Chile
Joined-up Governance and Sustainable Finance for Inclusive Ridge-to-Reef Conservation in Southwest Papua, Indonesia
in-person (Tomi Haryadi)
Ahmad Dhiaulhaq and Tomi Haryadi
World Resources Institute (WRI), indonesia
Improving Conservation Action in Chinese Small-Scale Fishery Commons
in-person
Safari Fang
Stanford University. US
Deliberation Shapes Preferences for Local Spending on Climate Adaptation and Mitigation
in-person
JT Erbaugh
Dartmouth University, USA

Panel 6. 4.

Advancing Governance in Web3 Public Goods

Chair: Anke Liu
Stellar Development Foundation
Details
Session 6. 4.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Campus Center 174
 

Sub-theme 7

Methodological Approaches and Computational Institutional Science

Theme Details

The study of the commons has always benefited from complementary use of a variety of methodological techniques. Advances in the computer-based collection, processing, and analysis of data continue to bring rewards to methodological experimentation and innovation. Simultaneous advances in conceptually grounded institutional analysis approaches, such as the Institutional Grammar, support the integration of theory with these methodological techniques. Through this theme we welcome submissions that are applying various methodological techniques (e.g., qualitative, quantitative, and computational)  to advancing institutional science.  Computational methods include, for example, automated coding procedures, computer-supported qualitative research, digital commons, machine learning, artificial intelligence, and computer simulation. Also welcome are submissions that apply the Institutional Grammar in concert with these techniques.

Program Committee sub-theme members:  Seth Frey, Saba Siddiki

Panels

Panel 7. 1.

Model Based Institutional Development

Chair: Michael Zargham
BlockScience
Details
Session 7. 1. A.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS211
Operationalizing Calm Technology: a Framework for Evaluating Human-Computer Attention Impacts
in-person
Amber Case
Calm Tech Institute, United States
Engineering Protocols for Collaborative Knowledge Production
in-person
RJ Cordes1,2
1BlockScience, United States, 2COGSEC, United States
Organizational Navigation Via Institutional Statements
in-person
Michael Zargham1,2 and Christopher Frantz3
1BlockScience, United States, 2Metagov, United States, 3The Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
Session 7. 1. B.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS211
From Strategy to Rule (and Back Again): Generative Modelling of Endogeneous Institutionalization Processes
online
Christopher Frantz1 and Seth Frey2
1Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway, 2University of California, Davis, USA
Polycentric Knowledge Commons Via Knowledge Organization Infrastructure
in-person
David Sisson and Ilan Ben-Meir
BlockScience, USA
A Platform for Platform Cooperatives: Notes From a Work in Progress
in-person
Ravi Shukla
Independent Researcher, India

Panel 7. 2.

The roles of constitutive statements in the governance of social ecological systems

Chair: Edella Schlager
University of Arizona
Details
Session 7. 2.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS211
A Defining Moment: an Analysis of the Constitutive Statements That Parameterize the U.S. National Security and Foreign Policy Effort to Combat Climate Change
online
Daniel Detzi
United States Air Force Academy, United States
From Aspiration to Action: Comparing the Internal Institutional Fit of Constitutive and Regulative Rules in International Conservation Treaties
in-person
Ute Brady1 and Saba Siddiki2
1Arizona State University, USA, 2Syracuse University, USA
Principle of Inclusion: Where Law Meets the Commons
in-person
Grzegorz Blicharz
Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland
Using the Institutional Grammar to Systematically Map Democratic Features in Constitutional Texts
in-person
Juan Uribe-Quintero1, Tomás Olivier1, Ute Brady2, Christopher Frantz3, Angelica Molina1, and Saba Siddiki1
1Syracuse University, USA, 2Arizona State University, USA, 3Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
Incorporating Constitutive Statements Into the IAD Framework: Adding a Constitutives Rule Typology and Expanding the Action Situation
in-person
Edella Schlager1 and Tomas Olivier2
1University of Arizona, USA, 2Syracuse University, USA

Panel 7. 3.

Long-term institutional change in polycentric commons governance

Chair: Elizabeth Baldwin
University of Arizona
Details
Session 7. 3. A.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS211
Fighting a “Common Bad” in the Sonoran Desert: a Study of long-term Institutional Change
in-person
Elizabeth Baldwin, Aaron Lien, Adam Henry, and Elise Gornish
University of Arizona, United States
Why Does Polycentric, Territorially Embedded Water Governance Fail? the Case of the Southern Portuguese Region of the Algarve
in-person
Andreas Thiel
University of Kassel, Germany
Shuffling Toward Polycentric Effectiveness in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed
in-person
Karen Baehler1 and Jennifer Biddle2
1American University, USA, 2University of North Carolina Wilmington, USA
Urban Transformation Leading to Polycentric Lake Governance: How Do Actors Interact?
online
Arvind Lakshmisha
Azim Premji University, India
Vaccines for Legitimacy: Building State Legitimacy Through Service Provision and Polycentric Governance Learning Mechanisms
online
Britt Koehnlein
Indiana University, USA
Session 7. 3. B.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS211
Understanding Institutional Change in Open Source Software Commons: a Multi-Level Analysis of the Apache Software Foundation
in-person
Santiago Virgüez Ruiz1, Brenda Bushouse2, and Curtis Atkisson3
1Department of Political Science, University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States, 2 School of Public Policy, United States, University of Massachusetts Amherst, 3University of Washington, United States
How Did We Get Here? the Evolution of a Polycentric System of Groundwater Governance
online
Ruth Langridge1 and Christopher Ansell2
1University of California, Santa Cruz, USA, 2University of California, Berkeley, USA
Urban Polycentric Government: Fundamental Principles
online
Mark Stephan
Washington State University, United States
The Effect of Contextual Developments on Agricultural Marketing Cooperatives in the Southern Slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania.
online
Wivina Byera Msebeni and Andreas Thiel
University of Kassel, Germany

Panel 7. 4.

Quantitative Institutional Diversity

Chair: Irene Pérez Ibarra
University of Zaragoza, Spain
Details
Session 7. 4. A.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN255
Risk and Response: Identifying (Mis)matches in Climate Adaptation Plans of 137 European Cities
online
Eve Castille, Konrad Bierl, and Lydia Finzel
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany
Quantifying the Diversity of Formal Rules to Compare Governance Systems of common-pool Resources
in-person
Ismael Lare1, Diego Arahuetes1, Alicia Tenza1, Laura Moreno1, Andrea Martín1, Javier Lacosta1, Rike Stotten2, Thea Wiesli2, Hassen Abdelhafidh3, Aymen Frija4, and Irene Pérez1
1Department of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain, 2Institute of Sociology, University of Innsbruck, Austria, 3Department of Rural Economics and Management at Higher School of Agriculture of Mograne, University of Carthage, Tunisia, 4ICARDA, Science for Resilient Livelihoods in Dry Areas, Morocco
Session 7. 4. B.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN255
Tracing Institutional Evolution in Industrial Agriculture: a Multilevel Epistemology for Applying Sociogenomic Methods to Crop Genetic Diversity
online
Maria Gerullis
University of Göttingen, Germany
Institutional Diversity: Significance and Methodologies for Its Study
in-person
Irene Pérez Ibarra, Ismael Lare David, and Laura Estévez Moreno
University of Zaragoza, Spain
Quantifying Institutional Diversity: a Comparative Analysis of rules-in-use in Pastoral Systems.
in-person
Ismael Lare, Diego Arahuetes, Alicia Tenza, Laura Moreno, Andrea Martín, Javier Lacosta, and Irene Pérez
Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain
Assessing Institutional Coordination in Interstate Water Institutions: a Rule-Based Quantitative Approach
in-person
Chee Hui Lai
Tsinghua University

Panel 7. 5.

The Institutional Grammar at 30: Revisiting Conceptual Foundations

co-Chairs: Ute Brady1, Edella Schlager2, and Saba Siddiki3
1ASU, 2U of Arizona, 3Syracuse U
Details
Session 7. 5.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN101
Norm Typology and the Study of Commons
in-person
Gerard Conway
Brunel University of London, United Kingdom
The Institutional Grammar – More to Explore
in-person
Saba Siddiki
Syracuse University, USA
Addressing Inter- and Intra-Participant Discrepancies in Rules-in-Use with the IG 2.0
in-person
Irene Pérez Ibarra1, Ismael Lare David1, Daniel W Detzi2, Alicia Tenza Peral1, and Ute Brady3
1University of Zaragoza, Spain; 2The United States Air Force Academy, USA; 3Arizona State University, USA

Panel 7. 6.

Advancing the Study of Collective Action in Governing the Commons with the Institutional Grammar

co-Chairs: Ute Brady1, Edella Schlager2, and Saba Siddiki3
1ASU, 2U of Arizona, 3Syracuse U
Details
Session 7. 6.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Campus Center 174
Methodological Contributions of Institutional Grammar to the Study of Translating International Obligations Into National Decision-Making: a Case Study on Brazil’s Nationally Determined Contributions Under the Paris Agreement
in-person
Leonardo Cunha Silva
University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
Studying Historical Environmental self-governance with the IG and Llms
in-person
Marianne Groep-Foncke and Tine De Moor
Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Expanding the Comprehension of Governance in Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Using the Institutional Grammar: a Case Study in Heilbronn
in-person
Carlos Alberto Prieto Valero
European University Viadrina, Germany
Norm-based Resource Management: an Institutional Grammar Analysis of Groundwater Laws in Iran
online
Arezoo Mirzaei and Insa Theesfeld
Institute of Agricultural and Nutritional Sciences, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Germany

Panel 7. 7.

AI and environmental governance

co-Chairs: Brent Never and Lin Zhou
Details
Session 7. 7.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS211
Constitutional AI and the Nesting of Institutions
in-person
Brent Never
University of Missouri- Kansas City, United States
Blueprints for Success: Leveraging Advances in Natural Language Processing to Synthesize and Assess the Role of Ostrom Institutional Design Principles
in-person
Jacopo Baggio1 and Graham Epstein2
1University of Central Florida, USA, 2University of Waterloo, Canada
From Conflict to Consensus: Agent-Based Modeling for Collective Decision-Making in Rural Collectively Owned Land Marketization
in-person
Lin Zhou1, Chenyu Fang2, and Shuhua Liu3
1University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA, 2Technical University of Munich, Germany, 3College of Geo-Exploration Science and Technology, Jilin University, China

Sub-theme 8

Indigenous commons

Theme Details

The Indigenous commons refers to lands, resources, and cultural traditions that are collectively owned and implemented by Indigenous communities. Such practices are rooted in traditional Indigenous ways of living with the natural environment, which emphasize communal stewardship, sustainability, and respect for the natural world. We welcome submissions on various topics related to the commons and Indigeneity, including traditional human-environment relationships, ancestral ecological knowledge, sacred spaces, geopolitical processes, and political alliances among Indigenous Peoples, as well as multi-stakeholder processes. Submissions that explore the impacts of these topics on Indigenous peoples, their sovereignty, and self-determination are also welcome, as are those that examine different ontological views on the commons and the institutions Indigenous communities have created for its management, both past and present.

Program Committee sub-theme members: Deborah Delgado Pugley, Juan Pablo Sarmiento, Elke Kelner

Panels

Panel 8. 1.

Defending the commons in the Peruvian Amazon

Chairs: Christine Hunefeldt
Details
Session 8. 1.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HASA0124
How Drug-Trafficking is affecting the Commons in Peru
online
Elena Álvarez
Ciencia Andina, Universidad del Pacífico, Perú
Land Scarcity in Indigenous Territories of the Peruvian Amazon: a New Sustainability Challenge for Forest Commons
online
Ana Araujo
Clark University, USA
Between Climate and Criminal Governance: Indigenous Defense of the Commons in the Extractive Frontier of the Peruvian Amazon
online
Maritza Paredes
Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Peru
From Community Early Warning Systems to Indigenous Territories: Formulas to Protect the Amazon Commons
online
Cesar Gamboa
Law Environment and Natural Resources DAR, Peru and Universidad de Salamanca, Spain

Panel 8. 2.

Should I stay or should I go? Youth, outmigration and engagement in commons management

co-Chairs: Gabriela Lichtenstein1 and James Robson2
1INAPL/CONICET, 2SENSE, University of Saskatoon
Details
Session 8. 2.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOE470
Strengthening Youth Ties to Land and Forest Culture: Examples From Asia, Africa, and the Americas
in-person
Patricia Shanley1, Citlalli Lopez2,3, Jenne de Beer4, and Sarah Laird5
1Forest & Climate Training (FACT), USA, 2CITRO, Mexico, 3University of Veracruz, Mexico, 4SPNKK, Philippines, 5People & Plants International, USA
Pathways for Youth Integration in Indigenous Territorial Governance and Climate Action
in-person
Marlene Soriano1, Olga Lidia Cabrera1, Ignacio Quiviquivi2, and Nataly Ascarrunz1
1Instituto Boliviano de Investigación Forestal - IBIF, Bolivia, 2Central Indígena de Comunidades Originarias de Lomerio - CICOL, Bolivia
Youth Migration, Community Responses, and What It Implies for Commons Scholarship
online
James Robson
SENS, University of Saskatchewan
Youth and Migration in the Argentinean Andes: How the Commons Can Work to Strengthen Community Ties
in-person
Gabriela Lichtenstein1, Julio Sardinas2, Mariana Cannizzo1, and James Robson3
1CONICET, Argentina, 2INTA, Argentina, 3USASK, Canada
Re-imagining Youth and Irrigation Future: a Systematic Scoping Review
in-person
Gitta Shrestha
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden

Panel 8. 3.

Indigenous Environmental Governance and Land Back

co-Chairs: Sibyl Diver1 and Mehana Vaughan2,3
1Stanford University , 2University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa3, U.H. Sea Grant College program
Details
Session 8. 3. A.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOE470
Reviving the Commons in Japan: Restoring land-human Relationship for climate-resilient Future
in-person
Hiroomi Takada1 and Saori Ogura2,3
1Organic Civial Engineering Association, Japan, 2Independent researcher, Japan, 3Fellow at the Organic Civial Engineering Association, Japan
ʻĀina Kupu: Lessons from collaborative care and governance of the commons in Hawaiʻi
in-person
Mehana Vaughan
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, Kīpuka Kuleana, Hawaiʻi
Ancestors and Angry Seas: Decolonizing Climate Frameworks for Resource Soverignty in Madagascar
in-person
Merrill Baker-Medard1, Hortensia Rasoanandrasana2, Charlotte Lahiko3, and Meïssa Atmani1
1Middlebury College, USA, 2Bobaomby Conservation Project, Madagascar, 3University of Madagasar, Toliara, Madagascar
Session 8. 3. B.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOE470
Transformative Climate Adaptation with Love and Care
in-person
Melissa Awbrey
Independent/Land to Sea Network, USA
Kīpuka Kuleana: Restoring Relationships to Place and Strengthening Climate Adaptation Through a Community-Based Land Trust
in-person
Sarah Barger
Kīpuka Kuleana (Kauaʻi, HI), USA, and Land to Sea Network, USA
A rights-based Approach to Advance Indigenous-led Community Health in Climate Disaster Events
online
Kajal Khanna
Stanford University, USA
Visiting for Shared Learning: Collaborations Among Re-Matriation Efforts
in-person
Alessandra Jerolleman
Loyola University New Orleans College of Law, USA
Building Equitable Community-Academic Partnerships: Lessons From Collaborative Research on Water Justice and Commons Governance
in-person
Heather Lukacs1 and Mehana Blaich Vaughan2
1Clear Current Consulting, LLC, USA, 2University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, Kīpuka Kuleana, Hawaiʻi
Session 8. 3. C.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOE470
Kanaka ʻŌiwi Planning for Coastal Adaptations
online
Kammie Tavares
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, US
Indigenous Leadership in Commons Governance Through Tribal Assessment Science: Collaborative Research on Klamath Dam Removal with the Karuk Tribe
in-person
Sibyl Diver1, John R. Oberholzer Dent2, and Ron Reed3
1Stanford University, USA, 2Karuk Tribe Department of Natural Resources, USA, 3Karuk Tribe, USA
Indigenous Knowledge in Managing the Commons: Case Study of the Bedouin’s Management of Rangelands in the Jordanian Southern Badia
in-person
Mai Nusir
Brandenburg Technical University Cottbus-Senftenburg, Germany
Power Shift: the Future of Indigenous-Led Renewable Energy
in-person
Kelsey Freeman and Karli Moore
Stanford University, United States

Panel 8. 5.

Indigenous rights and public policy

Chair: Jean Paul Benavides Lopez
Details
Session 8. 5.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOE470
Alter-Native Constitutionalism: Common-ing ‘Common’ Law, Transforming Property in South Africa
online
Sindiso MnisiWeeks
University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA
Bottom-up Conservation: Sub-national Protected Areas and Local Governance in Bolivia
in-person
Carlos Quezada Lambertin1, Jean Paul Benavides1, Julia Girard2, and Marcelo Gantier Mita3
1Universidad Católica Boliviana San Pablo, Bolivia, 2Center for Environmental Economics - Monpellier, France, 3Paris School of Economics, France
Indigenous Leadership and Environmental Stewardship in Wangari Maathai’s Unbowed: A Memoir
online
Joyce Onoromhenre Agofure
Ahmadu Bello University, Nigeria

Sub-theme 9

Commons and Commoning from a Critical Lens

Theme Details

There is now a well-established literature and movement to apply a critical lens to commons analysis. This approach emphasizes the effects of power and considers the impact of larger social, economic, and political structures. Power dynamics, inequality, and environmental justice have become central to this discourse. A growing body of literature from this perspective has pointed to the ways in which the commons are produced and sustained in relation to historic and geographically-varying processes. These broader influences have been shown to shape the conditions that either promote or hinder local collective action. Topics in this subtheme include queering the commons; postcolonial /anticolonial/decolonising ideas around the commons; Black and Indigenous theories around the commons and commoning; subaltern/Global South perspectives on the commons; feminism and the commons; ableness and the commons; political ecology and the commons, and anarchist and communist theorizations of the commons. The theme leaders encourage contributions from a diverse group of scholars, including early career researchers and scholars from the Global South.

Program Committee sub-theme members: Lavanya Suresh, Diana Ojedo, Prakash Kashwan

Panels

Panel 9. 1.

Public policy, institutions, and the state: Tracing power in decision-making processes of commons governance in postcolonial societies

co-Chairs: Tejendra Pratap Gautam1, Lavanya Suresh, Hita Unnikrishnan, Naira Dehmel, Maria Gerullis, Verena Hackmann, and Désirée Schwindenhammer
1Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay
Details
Session 9. 1. A.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS0134
Role of States in Supporting Commoning: a Comparative Case Study of Facilitating Post-Recognition Processes in Maharashtra and Odisha States of India
online
Santosh Gedam1 and Janmejaya Mishra2
1Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad, India; 2Ashank Desai Centre for Policy Studies, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Mumbai, India
Forest Commoning for Sustainable Livelihoods: a Case of Gram Sabha Federation of Kurkheda Block in Vidarbha, India
online
Tejendra Gautam
Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Mumbai, India
Shadows of the Postcolonial State in rights-based Forest Governance in Central India
online
Anuja Date, Sharachchandra Lele, Shruti Mokashi, and Gautam Aredath
Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE), India
Power Differentials in Collective decision-making Forums for Indigenous Peoples’ Tenure (in)security in India’s Forests
online
Dipika Adhikari
The Australian National University, Australia
Session 9. 1. B.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS0134
Strategies for Conservation and Management of Sacred Groves in India: a Case Study of Rajasthan
online
Shruti Majumdar1 and Sailaja Nandigama2
1BITS-Pilani, India, 2Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani, India
Demarcating Community Forest Resources: Narratives From Postcolonial Eastern India
online
Suchisree Chatterjee
Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, India
Re-imagining Freedom: a Spatial History of Postcolonial Unfreedom Through the Relational Geography of Mumbai’s Salt Pans.
in-person
Titli Thind
University of California, Berkeley, India
Analysing Gender and Displacement: Rethinking Conservation Policies in Post-Colonial India
online
Titas Dutta
Michigan State University, United States

Panel 9. 2.

Power Dynamics and Social Inequalities in Commons Governance

co-Chairs: Praneeta Mudaliar1 and Prakash Kashwan
1University of Toronto Mississauga
Details
Session 9. 2. A. Power and Inequalites: Care and Commoning
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOW245
The Power of Care in Youth-Led Commoning
in-person
Praneeta Mudaliar1, Dannia Eyelli Philipp Gutierrez2, Lilian Dart1, and Celina Mankarios1
1University of Toronto Mississauga, Canada, 2University of Toronto St. George, Canada
Caring with and Against Commoning in Two Contested Green Spaces in Montréal
in-person
Amy Poteete1, Pavel Kunsyz2, and Nik Luka3
1Concordia University, Canada, 2Université de Liège, Belgium, 3McGill University, Canada
Patterns of Commoning at the Intersection of Being Together and Sustaining fair(er) Relationships
online
Jill Philine Blau
Friedensau Adventist University, Germany
Communities for Autonomy: Building Local Institutions for Territorial Defense and self-determination in Indigenous Mexico
in-person
Fiona Gladstone1 and Bia'ni Madsa' Juarez Lopez2
1Fairleigh Dickinson University, United States, 2Indigenous Medicine Conservation Fund, Mexico
Session 9. 2. D. Environmental Justice
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOW245
Power in Collaborative Watershed Governance: the Case of the Hudson River Watershed in Upstate New York
in-person
Prakash Kashwan1 and Praneeta Mudaliar2
1Brandeis University, USA, 2University of Toronto, Canada
Agri-Food System Governance in Bangladesh’s Coastal Regions: Why the Socio-Ecological Systems Approach Needs to Be Politicized
online
Deepa Joshi1, Paul Schulze1, and Mou Rani Sarker2
1International Water Management Institute, Sri Lanka, 2International Rice Research Institute, Bangladesh
Decolonising Practices of North – South Research Collaboration: a Scoping Review
online
Ama Asantewah Ahene-Codjoe1, Mariah Ngutu2,3, and Onintsoa Ravaka Andriamihaja4,5
1University of Ghana, Ghana, 2National Defence University, Kenya, 3University of Nairobi, Kenya, 4Centre for Development and Environment (CDE), Switzerland, 5University of Bern, Switzerland
Session 9. 2. B. Gender and urban commons
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOW245
If Green Grass Is Burning, We don’t Talk About the Dry: Power Dynamics and Collective Action Responses to the Threat of Increased Economic Insecurities in Northern Ghana.
in-person
Shan Sappleton
University of Wisconsin-Platteville, USA
Rejuvenating the Commons or Reinforcing Exclusion? Power Dynamics and Marginalization in the Ecorestoration of Bengaluru’s Kempambudhi Lake
online
Akash Jash and Veena K. Bhat
Institute for Social and Economic Change, India
Reversing the Narrative: Women as Stewards in Commons Governance
in-person
Swapnasri Sarangi
Foundation for Ecological Security, India
Boundary of Distributive Commons as an Institutional Design Problem.
in-person
Torange Khonsari
London Metropolitan University, United Kingdom
Session 9. 2. C. Micro-politics
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOE480
Who Benefits From Mangrove Commons? Moneylenders, Captive Markets, and Livelihood Realities in the Banladesh’s Sundarbans
in-person
Sujoy Subroto and Conny Davidsen
University of Calgary, Canada
Unveiling Everyday Politics and Power Dynamics in a Multi-Use Commons in Maharashtra, India
online
Rashmi Mahajan1 and Praneeta Mudaliar2
1Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE), India, 2University of Toronto Mississauga, Canada
Power Relations in the Co-Management of Fisheries in Ghana: Experiences of the Fishers in the Komenda-Edina-Eguafo-Aberim Municipality
online
Theophilus Kweku Bassaw
Komenda College of Education, Ghana
Collective Action Amidst Agency Constraints: the Experience of Community Fish Refuges in Cambodia
online
Carla Baldivieso1, Sanjiv De Silva2, Pia Gleich3, and Michelle Bonatti4
1Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany, 2International Water Management Institute, Sri Lanka, 3Freie Universität Berlin, Germany, 4Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research, Germany
How patron-client Relations Influence Fisheries co-management: a Case Study of Bangladesh
in-person
Rehnuma Ferdous and Fiona Nunan
University of Birmingham, United Kingdom

Panel 9. 3.

Goods, games, and power: Indivisibility, asymmetry, and the politics of interdependence

co-Chairs: Bryan Bruns1, Hita Unnikrishnan, Maria Gerullis, Sara Lorenzini
1Independent Researcher and Consulting Sociologist
Details
Session 9. 3.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 137
Playing on Uneven Ground: Agency in Asymmetric Situations
in-person
Bryan Bruns
Independent Researcher and Consultant, Greenbelt, Maryland USA, US
Institutional Preferences in the Laboratory
in-person
Qiankun Zhong1, Seth Frey2, and Nori Jacoby3
1MPI Human Development, Germany, 2UC Davis, USA; 3Cornell University, USA

Panel 9. 4.

Inequality, inequity, and the commons: Experimental advances

co-Chairs: Nathan Cook1 and Sechindra Vallury2
1Indiana University Indianapolis, 2University of Georgia
Details
Session 9. 4.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOW245
Effects of Information and Framing on Behavior in Unequal Social Dilemmas: Evidence From a Groundwater Experiment
in-person
Sechindra Vallury1, Nathan Cook2, and Minwoo Ahn3
1University of Georgia, USA, 2Indiana University Indianapolis, USA, 3University of Arizona, USA
Inequality Shapes Equity Perceptions of Conservation Enforcement Mechanisms
in-person
Nathan Cook1, Adriana Molina-Garzon1, Julia Naime2, and Arild Angelsen3
1Indiana University Indianapolis, USA, 2NMBU, Norway, 3Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway
Gender Quotas & Broadening Participation in Forest User Groups
in-person
Nathan Cook1, Tara Grillos2, and Krister Andersson3
1Indiana University Indianapolis, USA, 2Purdue University, USA, 3University of Notre Dame, USA
Does Inequality Influence the Effectiveness of Collective PES Among Small and Medium Farmers?
in-person
Adriana Molina Garzon1, Julia Naime2, and Arild Angelsen2
1Indiana University Indianapolis, United States; 2School of Economics and Business, Norway

Panel 9. 5.

Restoring the Commons in 20th and 21st century Latin America: opportunities and challenges

co-Chairs: Christian Búschges and Lisa Alvarado Grefa-Lúscher
University of Bern
Details
Session 9. 5.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOE470
From Commons to Comodities. Commoning Responses to Extractivism in Latin Ametica
in-person
Leticia Merino
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México
Impact of Payments for Environmental Services on Sustainable Management of Community Forests in State of Mexico
online
Eugene Hakizimana, Dulce María Monroy Becerril, and María del Rocío Soto Flores
National Polytechnic Institute, Mexico
Who Is More Ancestral? Territory, Property, and Legal Fetishism in the Ecuadorian Amazon
online
Angus Lyall
Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador

Panel 9. 6.

Solidarity Economy and the Commons

co-Chairs: Emily Kawano1 and People's Network for Land & Liberation (Cooperation Jackson, Cooperation Vermont, Wellspring Cooperative, Native Roots Network, Incite Focus, Community Movement Builders)
1US Solidarity Economy Network
Details
Session 9. 6.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Campus Center 163
The Solidarity Economy and the Commons – A Fishbowl-based Discussion
in-person
Emily Kawano with other likely participants such as David Cobb, Boone Schear, Kali Akuno, Blair Evans, and others
Wellspring Cooperative, USA

Panel 9. 7.

Caste and Gender in the Village Commons

co-Chairs: Gummadi Sridevi1 and Amalendu Jyotishi2
1School of Economics , University of Hyderabad, 2School of Development, Azim Premji University. Bangaluru, India.
Details
Session 9. 7.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HASA0124
Sustainable Commons Management in India: a Gender Perspective
online
Chandrima Biswas
University of Hyderabad, India
Caste in Village Commons: Ontological Insights From a Telangana Villages in India
online
Gummadi Sridevi1, Amalendu Jyotishi2, and Dontha Prashanth3
1School of Economics, University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad, India, 2School of Development, Azim Premji University, Bangalore, India, 3School of Arts & Science, Azim Premji University, Bangalore, India
Caste , Gender and Common Agricultural Land in North India: Insights from Punjab
online
Pampa Mukherjee
Panjab University, India

Panel 9. 8.

Local impacts of global regimes of Enclosures: Perspectives from Global South

co-Chairs: Saurabh Chowdhury1, Sujoy Subroto, Sammy Snachez, and Ana Watson
1University of Calgary
Details
Session 9. 8. A.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN 155
Justice in Access to Climate Finance: the Role of Territorial Funds
in-person
Deborah Delgado Pugley
Brown University, USA and PUCP, Peru
Revealing Nature-Based Solutions in the Anthropocene: Insights From Local Contexts and Indigenous Narratives
online
Maria Ines Carbajal1, Fany Ramos2, Sergio Romero3, Hector Turra4, and Ana Watson5
1Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Argentina; 2Centro de Acciones por el Desarrollo, la Educacion y la Cultura, Bolivia; 3ENJUVES- encuentro de Juventudes por Escaú, Bolivia; 4Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary, Canada; 5Political Sciences, University of Calgary, Canada
Parallel Projects: a Historical Examination of Land Reform, Enclosure, and the Expansion of Mining Concessions in Rural Mexico, 1988-2012
online
John Hayes
University of Calgary, Canada
Redefining a Shared Space: the Case of Coastal Communities of Lake Tanganyika in Burundi
online
Bakenga Maksudi
University of Calgary, Canada
Session 9. 8. B.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN 155
External Vulnerability of the Commons: a Universal Condition Requiring International Protection
in-person
Ronald Oakerson1 and Katherine Stevick2
1Houghton University, United States, 2State University of New York at Stony Brook, United States
Neoliberal Entwined: Narratives of Enclosed Ecological Commons From the Protected Areas of Duars, North Bengal
in-person
Priyadarsini Sinha, Jenia Mukherjee, and Amrita Sen
Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, India
Adapting to Shrinking Commons: a Study on Rabari Pastoralists in Drylands of Western India
online
Pujan Mehta
Ambedkar University, India
Have ‘Life Plans’ Delivered on Their Transformative Aspirations for Indigenous Empowerment Through Conservation? Evidence From Four Watersheds in the Peruvian Amazon
in-person
Ashwin Ravikumar
Amherst College, USA

Panel 9. 9.

Alternative imaginaries of commons

Chair: Jean Bacchetta and Roberta Agnifili
Details
Session 9. 9. A.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOE480
Challenging Corporate-Community Imbalances in Commons Governance Within Italian Corporate Law
online
Clara De Chirico
University of Macerata, Italy and University of Ottawa, Canada
Reclaiming the Digital Commons: Social Justice in the Global South
online
Devina Srivastava
Independent, India
Relational Architecture and Commons: a New Paradigm of Sharing
in-person
Roberta Agnifili
University of L'Aquila, Italy
Commons, the state and remoteness as socio-material condition : the Domestic Estate of Kythira
online
Sofia Tektonidou1, Pieter Van den Broeck2, and Pavlos-Marinos Delladetsimas1
1Harokopio University of Athens, Greece; 2KU Leuven, Belgium
Session 9. 9. B.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOE480
Rewilding non-human Species as Commoning Perspectives: the “Bison Comeback”
in-person
Jean Bacchetta and Ellen Hertz
University of Neuchatel, Switzerland
Commoning by a Community of Beings: Implications for Institutional Analysis and Governance
in-person
Graham Roy Marshall1 and Bryan Randolph Bruns2
1University of New England, Australia, 2Independent Researcher and Consultant, USA
Local Circular Economy – Reimaging an Alternative Economic Model
in-person
Ranjit Mohanty and Subrata Singh
Foundation for Ecological Security, India

Panel 9. 10.

Liberated Zones: Creating and Defending Self-Governing Communities in the US

Chair: David Cobb
Details
Session 9. 10. A.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOW245
Liberated Zones: Creating and Defending Self-Governing Communities in the US
in-person
David Cobb1,Kali Akuno1,Blair Evans
People's Network for Land & Liberation, United States
Session 9. 10. B.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOW245
Liberated Zones: Creating and Defending Self-Governing Communities in the US
in-person
David Cobb1,Michelle Eddleman McCormick1,Leon Edmonds1Emily Kawano
People's Network for Land & Liberation, United States

Panel 9. 11.

Community response to disturbance

Chair: Flor Angel Perez Sanchez
Details
Session 9. 11.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN101
Inclusive Governance and Land Tenure: Addressing Decision-Making Challenges in Common Land Ejidos of Quintana Roo, Mexico
online
Dannia Philipp
University of Toronto, Canada
Social Perception and Socio-Evironmental Conflicts in the Interoceanic Corridor: the Influence of Land Tenure and Territorial Governance
in-person
Flor Angel Perez Sanchez
Centro de Investigaciones Tropicales (CITRO), México
Micro-Mobilities as Adaptive Strategies in Climate-Affected Communities in the South Pacific
online
Andreas Neef1, Anita Latai-Niusulu2, Masami Tsujita2, and Renata Varea3
1Griffith University, Australia; 2National University of Samoa, Samoa; 3Independent Researcher, Fiji
Commons and Territorial Security: Challenges Faced by Artisanal Fishery Communities Impacted by Offshore Oil and Gas Industry
online
Juliana Melo1, Tometich Patrícia2, and Walter Tatiana3
1Federal Unviersity of Bahia, Brazil, 2Paraná State Unviersity, Brazil, 3Federal University of Rio Grande, Brazil

Panel 9. 12.

Everyday experiences, in-between spaces and subversive practices around the use/governance of commons

Chair: Rachanadevi Vaishnav
Details
Session 9. 12.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 137
Community Claims
online
Rachanadevi Vaishnav
Tata Institute of Social Sciences, India
Tourism as a Decolonization Project: How a Village Challenge the State Encroachment Through the Practice of Commoning
online
Nurhady Sirimorok
Forest and Society Research Group, Faculty of Forestry, Universitas Hasanuddin, Indonesia
Solidarity Economy and Community land-trust : a Case Study of Cultural Commons Facing Urban Speculation.
online
Laura Aufrère
Laboratoire Crise et transition - Université Sorbonne Paris Nord / Labex ICCA, France

Panel 9. 13.

Women's rights, agency and vulnerabilities

Chair: Cheryl Doss
Details
Session 9. 13.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 137
Urban Commoning as a Process: the Role of Trust and Solidarity Mechanisms From Italian case-studies.
online
Monica Ibba
University of Genoa, Italia
Community Stewardship Towards Securing Land Rights and Economic Empowerment of Slum Women in Odisha
in-person
Pranati Das1, Rajesh Prabhakar Patil2, and Meghna Malhotra3
1Independent Researcher, India, 2Housing & Urban Development Department, Government of Odisha, India, 3Urban Management Centre, India
Womens multi-faceted Roles in Peacebuilding Initiative: Insights From Pastoral Communities in West Pokot County, Kenya
online
Lilian Namuma S Kongani
University of Cape Town, South Africa and University of Nairobi, Kenya
Women’s Land Rights Under Collective Tenure
in-person
Cheryl Doss1, Ruth Meinzen-Dick2, Fiona Flintan3, Rachael Knight4, Anne Larson5, and Iliana Monterroso6
1Tufts University, United States, 2International Food Policy Research Institute, US, 3International Livestock Research Institute, Italy, 4International Institute for Environment and Development, US, 5Center for International Forestry Research, US, 6Climate and Land Use Alliance, Guatemala
Water Anxiety in Disaster Led Displacements
in-person
Mansee Bal Bhargava1, Garbhit Naik2, Sromona Burman1, and Sangeeth K3
1WODER and WforW Foundation, India, 2WODER and WforW Foundation, Netherlands, 3NID Gandhinagar, India

Panel 9. 14.

Roundtable on Commons for Environmental and Climate Justice

Julian Agyeman, Sheila R. Foster, Prakash Kashwan, Diana Ojeda, Jesse Ribot and Moderator Praneeta Mudaliar
Details
Session 9. 14.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Campus Center 163
 

Panel 9. 15.

Author Meets Critics Roundtable: Decolonizing Environmentalism: Lessons for Governing the Commons

Kiran Asher, Mwangi wa Gĩthĩnji, Sindiso Mnisi Weeks, Prakash Kashwan, and Moderator: Dolly Daftary
UMass, Amherst, USA
Details
Session 9. 15.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Campus Center 174
 

Sub-theme 10

Commoning the Commons - Integrating Knowledge and Practice

Theme Details

The practice of commoning involves the collaborative management of shared resources by a community, guided by principles of mutual aid, sustainability, and equitable access. Commoning is widely seen as a response to privatization, technocentric approaches and historical enclosures of the commons, which continue today through processes like large-scale land grabs and diversion of commons for alternate ‘developmental’ usages. Commoning as a practice challenges traditional power structures and promotes collective, inclusive decision-making. It emphasizes the interconnectedness of social and ecological systems, advocating for community-driven governance of shared resources that enable both human and environmental well-being.

Examples of commoning include community governance of forests, pastures, water bodies, gardens, community land trusts, time banks, and open-access publishing and data sharing. This theme particularly welcomes submissions from practitioners and scholars collaborating with practitioners to analyze the impacts of commoning initiatives and explore the practice of commoning in their specific contexts, especially through the lens of gender equity, ecological well-being, and social justice.

Program Committee sub-theme members: Kiran Singh, Ted Rau, Cecile Green

Panels

Panel 10. 1.

Transmission and Innovations in Commons and Commoning

co-Chairs: Catherine Tucker1 and Mateja Smid-Hribar2
1University of Florida, 2Anton Melik Geographical Institute, The Research Centre of Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Ljubljana
Details
Session 10. 1.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Campus Center 162
Diving in Complexity: a Commons Approach to the long-term Governance of Tangible, Intangible and Hybrid Resources Shaping Agroecosystems in the Aubrac Highlands (France)
in-person
Flavia Guerrieri1 and Marie Dervillé2
1Laboratoire d’Etude et de Recherche sur l’Economie, les Politiques et les Systèmes Sociaux (LEREPS), France, 2Laboratoire d’Etude et de Recherche sur l’Economie, les Politiques et les Systèmes Sociaux (LEREPS), Université de Toulouse, ENSFEA, IEP, France
The Sociobiodiversity Value Chains and the Diversity of Organizational Arrangements in the Brazilian Amazon
online
Celia Futemma1, Fabio de Castro2, and Eduardo Brondizio3
1State University of Campinas, Brazil, 2University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 3Indiana University, United States of America
Indigenous Institutional Innovations for Managing Communal Forest Resources: How Community Forest Enterprises Adapt Formal Rules to Fit Both Conservation and well-being
in-person
Jazmin Gonzales Tovar1 and Reem Hajjar2
1Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, United States, 2Oregon State University, United States
The politics and policies of urban commoning: understanding transmissions and innovations under diverse state-society relations
in-person
Kauan Lunardon1, Lucia Capanema Alvares1, and Giuseppe Micciarelli2
1Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil, 2University of Naples Federico II, Italy

Panel 10. 2.

Principled and pragmatic approaches to formation and governance of knowledge sharing communities

Chair: Greg Bloom
Ostrom Workshop, Indiana University
Details
Session 10. 2.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN255
Examining Digital Commons Movements and Their Values, Strategies, and Alignments
Mai Ishikawa Sutton
Commons Network / DWeb, USA
Values in Governance Technology
in-person
Liz Barry
Metagov
The Value of Declaring Your Values: Normative Instruments for Collective choice-making
in-person
Greg Bloom

Panel 10. 3.

Commons literacies: theory and practice

co-Chairs: Seth Frey1 and Cecile Green
1UC Davis
Details
Session 10. 3.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOE245
Commons Literacy as Political Work of Collective Learning
in-person
Natasha Hulst
Schumacher Center, Grond van Bestaan, Voedselpark Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Instantiating a Global Governance Commons
Cecile Green
Self-Governance Commons / Round Sky Solutions, USA
A Popular Travel Guide to the Commons
online
Danny Spitzberg
UC Berkeley, United States

Panel 10. 4.

How Patterns of Commoning Reveal Commons as Relational Social Systems

co-Chairs: David Bollier1,2 and Johannes Euler
1Schumacher Center for a New Economics, USA, 2Commons-Institut, Germany
Details
Session 10. 4.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Campus Center 163
How Patterns of Commoning Reveal Commons as Relational Social Systems
in-person
David Bollier

Panel 10. 5.

Using commons and cooperative games for education and science communication

Chairs: Elizabeth Baldwin
University of Arizona
Details
Session 10. 5.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center NORTH 111
Grassvasion: a semi-cooperative Game About a Common Bad
in-person
Elizabeth Baldwin1 and Ryan Rowitt2
1University of Arizona, United States, 2Omniscape Games, United States
Governing the Commons in Classroom Games
in-person
Praneeta Mudaliar1, Tom Koontz2, and Annika Harley1
1University of Toronto Mississauga, Canada, 2University of Washington Tacoma, United States of America
Using Strategic Games to Illustrate Environmental Policy Concepts for Undergraduates
in-person
Minwoo Ahn and Elizabeth Baldwin
University of Arizona, United States
A Digital Fisheries Game Using QR Codes in the Classroom
in-person
Michael Cox
Dartmouth University, United States

Panel 10. 6.

SDGs after 10 years

Chair: Tobias Haller
Details
Session 10. 6
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Campus Center 174
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) after 10 years
online
Tobias Haller
University of Bern, Switzerland

Panel 10. 7.

Heightened states: Emergency as an accelerator of commoning practices

Chair: Sophie Jerram
Te Herenga Waka, Victoria University of Wellington
Details
Session 10. 7.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:00 AM – 5:00 AM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 138
From the Emergence of Fires to the Emerging Urban Commons: Muschio Ribelle’s Struggle in Sicily for Collective and Civic Uses
online
Suzanne Ott, Marco Pitò, and Emmanuele Calautti
Muschio Ribelle, Italy
Weather Commoning? Searching for Ways to Live Well with Increasingly “Bad” Weather in the Coming Age of Weather Modification Technologies
online
Chris Berthelsen, Tsuyoshi Hatori, Christoph Rupprecht, and Takuya Iwahori
Ehime University, Japan
Disaster Theatre: Disaster at Vogelmorn (a Case Study)
online
Sophie Jerram1, Alex Bonham2, and Chris Berthelsen3
1Te Herenga Waka, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, 2Independent, New Zealand, 3Ehime University, Japan
Growing an astro-ecological Knowledge Commons: Post-Detection SETI and Unprecedented Planetary Events
online
Kate Genevieve
University of Sussex, UK

Panel 10. 10.

Water conversations towards water conservation and making water everybody’s business

Chair: Mansee Bal
Details
Session 10. 10. A.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOE245
Unpacking the Myths of Water Users Associations: Diverse Organizational Modalities of Grassroots Irrigation Management in Rural China
online
Caixia Man
School of Global Development, University of East Anglia, UK
Rural and Urban Water Conservation in India
online
Dr. Nidhi Gupta
WICCI, India
Inclusivity, Resilience and Commons in Wastewater Management: Odisha’s Innovative Approach
online
Prasanta Kumar Mohapatra1, Suryabarti Majhi2, and Suchisnata Sahoo3
1CPHEEO, Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs, Govt. of India, 2Odisha Water Supply & Sewerage Board, Govt. of Odisha, India, 3Independent Consultant, India
Community-led, Decentralized WASH Management – the Odisha (India) Story
in-person
Pranati Das1, Usha Padhee2, Rajesh Prabhakar Patil2, Manvita Baradi1, Xerxes Rao1, and Prasanta Kumar Mohapatra3
1Urban Management Centre, India, 2Housing & Urban Development Department, Government of Odisha, India, 3CPHEEO, MoHUA, Govt. of India, India
Session 10. 10. B.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOE245
Community-led Decentralized Water Conservation for Dignified Livelihoods in the Chambal Badlands of India
online
Indira Khurana
Indian Himalayan River Basins Council, India
Power, Access, and Governance: an Urban Political Ecology of Urban Springs in Shimla, India
online
Soma Sarkar
Administrative Staff College of India, India
Process of Archival Activities by Citizens and Information Tool Development on Watering Places for Shared Use
online
Terukazu Kumazawa
Osaka University of Economics, Japan
Water Anxiety in Disaster Led Displacements
in-person
Mansee Bal

Panel 10. 12.

Harnessing community capital

Chair: Marie-Anne Perreault
Details
Session 10. 12.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOE245
‘Thengapalli’: a Case Study on Kondh women-led Governing System and Integration of Their Local Knowledge Into Forest Governance
online
Anwesha Mohanty and Lavanya Suresh
Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani- Hyderabad Campus, India
Japanese Forest Commons Cultivate Shared Purposes by Discovering New Values: a Variation in the Pattern of Commoning
in-person
Takuya Takahashi
The University of Shiga Prefecture, Japan
Ricochet Effect of Commoning Through Social Capital
in-person
Marie-Anne Perreault and Michaud Alexandre
Saint-Paul University, Canada

Panel 10. 13.

Commoning Across Context

Chair: Forrest Fleischman
Details
Session 10. 13.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOE245
Digitisation, Participation and Commoning in Rural Homestead Lands: an Analysis of SVAMITVA Scheme Using PRA Tools
online
Prasad Pathak, Anup Tripathi, Chaitanya Ravi, and Mahabub Basha
FLAME University, India
Regenerating Knowledge Commoning for Richer Relationality with Life
online
Simon Grant1 and Mario Yanez2
1Independent, Belgium, 2Independent, Portugal
Why and How Do We “Common”? Answers From Inside and Among Us
in-person
Danai Toursoglou Papalexandridou
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece
Social-Ecological Systems – Missed Opportunities and Paths Forward
in-person
Forrest Fleischman
University of Minnesota - Twin Cities, United States

Panel 10. 14.

Commons adaptations and self governance

Chair: Stephen Healy
Details
Session 10. 14.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN101
Living with Heat in Social Housing in Sydney Australia: Commons as Social Infrastructure
in-person
Stephen Healy1, Abby Mellick Lopes2, Louise Crabtree-Hayes1, Emma Power1, Cameron Tonkinwise2, Sebastian Pfautsch1, Helen Armstrong3, Bhavya Chitranshi1, and Katherine Gibson1
1Western Sydney University, Australia, 2University of Technology Sydney, Australia, 3Queensland University of Technology, Australia
Patterns of Commoning in Deliberative Democracies?
in-person
Anja Salzer, Maria Menendez-Blanco, Theresa Palmieri, and Kris Krois
Free University of Bolzano, Italy
Governing the Commons: an Ethnographic Exploration of Local Response to Complex Global Problems.
in-person
Md Nurul Islam1, Inzamam Us Zaman1, and Samiya A Selim2
1SAJIDA Foundation, Bangladesh, 2 University of Liberal Arts Bangladesh, Bangladesh
Management of Common Goods in the Face of Climate Change in Chiquitano Indigenous Communities: an Interdisciplinary Approach to Raise Awareness and Empower
in-person
Natalie Guillén Aguirre, Ramiro Molina Barrios, Rodrigo Pacheco, and Juan Pablo Neri
Universidad Católica Boliviana "San Pablo", Bolivia
Early Climate Mitigation as a Social Dilemma
online
Juana Castro Santa
University of Barcelona, Spain

Panel 10. 15.

Collaborative Research in and of Land Decommodification

co-Chairs: Boone Shear and Deborah Keisch
Details
Session 10. 15.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOE480
Mapping Land Decommodification
in-person
Deborah Keisch and Boone Shear
University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States
Communizing Land and Housing Through Activist Research
in-person
Jeff Coyne
University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States
Commoning Principles
in-person
Avery Conrad
University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States
Building Other World(s) On/With/As Part of a 12-Acre Plot of Land
in-person
Meredith Degyansky
University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States

Sub-theme 11

Urban commons

Theme Details

According to the latest United Nations projections, over 68% of the world’s population is expected to live in cities by 2050. Cities present a landscape of opportunities, challenges, and inequities, within which urban commons play critical roles in providing social and natural infrastructure that sustain lives and livelihoods. Urban commons refer to resources within cities that are formally or informally managed by diverse communities for shared use and benefit. These resources can be physical spaces, services, and digital platforms accessible to community members. Urban commons are a significant source of social and ecological development but also have the potential to exacerbate social exclusion. 

We invite submissions that explore various aspects of urban commons. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the history of urban commons, global and regional perspectives on urban commons, Ostromian, critical, and legal perspectives, urban commoning practices, and case studies of urban commons initiatives such as collective urban housing, community gardens, urban forests, pedestrian zones, public and street art installations, mass transit systems, and bike-sharing programs.

Program Committee sub-theme members: Hita Unnikrishnan, Albert Mumma

Panels

Panel 11. 2.

Lessons from the (In-)formal Urban South

Chair: Jean-Philippe De Visscher
UCLouvain
Details
Session 11. 2.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOW205
Defining, Identifying, and Mapping Waste Management in the Mexico City Metropolitan Area : a Case Study of Waste Collectors in Netzahualcóyotl and Sector 9
online
Géraldine de Neuville
UCLouvain, Belgium
Fluctuating Waterscapes: Adaptability and Artificial Stormwater Geographies in the Lowlands of Dakar, Senegal
online
Evelien Van Den Bruel
UCLouvain, Belgium
Looking for the Right Scale: the Spatial Dimension of Communing Water Management in the Bumbu River Valley, Kinshasa (RDC)
online
Pietro Manaresi
Louvain Institute for Landscape, Architecture and Built Environment, UCLouvain, Belgium
From Brussels to Yaoundé and Back: Shaping Methods for the Urban Commons
online
Jean-Philippe De Visscher
UCLouvain, Belgium

Panel 11. 3.

The role of urban commons in sustainable and equitable city making

co-Chair: Priscilla Pambana Gutto Bassett
Details
Session 11. 3. A. Built Structures
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOW205
Community Building Through Libraries: the Role of Urban Commons in Sustainable City-Making
online
Kathleen Ferrer
Independent, Colombia
Commons for or Under Redevelopment: the Case of Urban Villages in China
in-person
Tianci Xie and Xiao Lu Wang
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Participatory Design as Urban Commoning Practice
in-person
Ioana Petkova
London South Bank University, United Kingdom
Session 11. 3. B. Movements / Grassroots
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOW205
Commoning Through Urban Wastelands
online
Luca Piddiu1, Cécile Mattoug2, and Pavel Kunysz3
1Université de Genève, Switzerland, 2VetAgro Sup, France, 3Université de Liège, Belgium
From Margins to Mainstream: How Urban Commons Are Reshaping European Cities
in-person
Maxime Zaït
Vrije universitijt brussel (VUB) & Communa, Belgium
Community Gardens as Prefigurative Politics in São Paulo’s Housing Struggles
online
Leticia Costa De Oliveira Santos
Federal University of ABC, Brasil
Session 11. 3. C. Futures / Re-invention
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOW205
Defying Legal Title in Defense of a small-town Urban Commons
in-person
Anne MacKinnon
University of Wyoming, United States
Commoning for, with, Against or Beyond the State?
in-person
Xenia Katsigianni1, Pieter Van Den Broeck1, Serge Gutwirth2, Constanza Parra3, Pavlos Delladetsimas4, Eirini Skrimizea3, Alessia Tanas2, Thomas Figuera2, Maxime Zaït2, and Sofia Tektonidou4,5
1Department of Architecture, KU Leuven, Belgium, 2Department of Interdisciplinary Studies in Law, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium, 3Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, KU Leuven, Belgium, 4Department of of Geography, Harokopio University of Athens, Greece, 5 KU Leuven, Belgium
From Participation to Collaboration. Deconstructing the Principles of Urbanism of the Past Through New Urban Patterns of Commoning
in-person
Silvana Segapeli
Research Unit "Architectures et Transformations", Ecole Nationale Supérieure d'Architecture de Saint-Etienne, , France
A Methodology to Explore Utopian Urban Food Commoning Imaginaries in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
in-person
Alejandra Diabb Sanchez
Natural Resources Institute, University of Manitoba, Canada
“This Is a Way to Make Change”: Commoning in Ghana’s Urban Centres
in-person
Pambana Bassett
University of Bern, Switzerland

Panel 11. 4.

Public health and urban commons

Chair: Hita Unnikrishnan
University of Warwick, UK
Details
Session 11. 4.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOE245
Reclaiming Bagnoli’s Contested Waterfront: the Urban Commons and Public Health
online
Domenico Salvatore Galluccio1 and Rosita Lamoglie2
1Department of Social Sciences, The University of Naples Federico II, Italy, 2Department of Literary, The University of Naples L'Orientale, Italy
Climate Resilience and the Commons: Moving Beyond the urban-natural Divide in Theory and Practice
online (Bordhi)
Francesca Sabatini1 and Alice Borchi2
1Department of Architecture - Alma Mater Studiorum University of Bologna, Italy, 2School of Performance and Cultural Industries - University of Leeds, United Kingdom
COVID-19 and Urban Commons: Assessing Hand Hygiene Awareness and Practices Among Undergraduates in Rivers State, Nigeria
online
Chukwuemeke Buzome
Abraka Department of Educational Management and Foundations, Delta State University, Nigeria
Strengthening local health institutions for improved access to primary health care in Nigeria
online
Philip Onyekachukwu Egbule1, Chukwuemeke Buzome2, and Christian Ikechukwu Ojeogwu3
1Department of Arts and Social Sciences Education, University of Delta Agbor, Delta State, Nigeria Nigeria, 2Department of Educational Management and Foundations, Delta State University, Abraka, Nigeria, 3Eku Baptist Government Hospital Eku, Delta State, Nigeria
Implications for the Global South:China’s Integrated Health Care Delivery System as a Public Good with Institutional Strengths
online
Kang Qiaoli
China Agricultural University, China

Panel 11. 5.

Designing urban commons

Chair: Daniel Shussett
Details
Session 11. 5.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOW205
Housing with Raw Earth as Commons. a Global Perspective on Community-Led Construction
online
Evangelia Frangedaki1, Nikos Anastasopoulos2, and George Papanikolaou3
1School of Civil Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, Greece, 2School of Architecture, National Technical University of Athens, Greece, 3Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, Harokopio University, Greece
Rethinking Models of Urban Planning in the Face of Growing Density
online
Michael Spencer
Monash University, Melbourne
Common Knowledge, Smart Cities, and Climate Change
in-person
Daniel Shussett
Villanova University, USA
Collective Ownership and Local Urban Plans: Ways to Develop the Urban Commons?
in-person
Halima El Bajnouni
Univesité Paris Est Créteil - Laboratoire MIL, France

Panel 11. 6.

Dimensions of justice operating in and around urban commons

Chair: Charmain Levy
Details
Session 11. 6.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOW205
The Current Environmental Advocacy Landscape Within the Minneapolis-St. Paul Metropolitan Region
in-person
Hailey Draper
University of Minnesota - Twin Cities, United States
Diversity in Commons: Identifying Contextual, Relational and Substantial Characteristics of Urban Commons Experiences in Bologna
in-person
Charmain Levy1 and Marco Alberio2
1Université du Québec en Outaouais (UQO), Canada, 2Università di Bologna, Italie
Conflicts Surrounding Green and Gray Approaches to Urban Sustainability: a Case Study in Minneapolis, MN
in-person
Aaron Whittemore
University of Minnesota, US
Normal for Whom? Exploring Socioeconomic Variation in a Travel Cost Analysis of Urban Shoreline Fishing
in-person
Camille Antinori1, Tobias Borger2, and Philip King1
1San Francisco State University, United States of America, 2Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany
Right to Public Open Spaces in Amritsar Smart City: a Case Study for Spatial Justice and SDG 11.7
online
Garima Jasrotia and Dr. Kiran Singh
University of Allahabad, India

Panel 11. 8.

Urban policy and implementation in the context of urban commons

Chair: Melanie McDermott
Sustainability Institute, The College of New Jersey, USA
Details
Session 11. 8.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOW205
A Tree Grows in New Jersey: New Opportunities in Urban Tree Commons and Their Limitations
in-person
Melanie McDermott
Sustainability Institute, The College of New Jersey, USA
Collective Action for Solving Resource Dilemmas in a Rapidly Urbanizing Context: an Institutional Analysis of Shared Groundwater Governance in Peri-Urban India
in-person
Raksha Balakrishna and Marco Janssen
Arizona State University, United States of America
The State, the Community and the Commons: a Study of a Residential Park in Delhi
online
Bidisha Banerji1, Gautam Agrawal2, and Kumar Aniket3
1Amity University Noida, India, 2G.D. Goenka University, Gurugram, India, 3Research Fellow, United Kingdom

Sub-theme 12

Open call and emerging approaches

Theme Details

The commons represents  a diverse array of fields and perspectives, and we acknowledge that the themes selected for IASC 2025 do not fully capture the breadth of interests among commons scholars. Moreover, the scope of commons work extends beyond scholarly publications. We invite submissions of both scholarly and practice-based work on aspects of the commons that may not align closely with our primary conference themes. We also welcome  contributions that fit within the overarching theme of the commons but may not conform to the traditional framework of an academic conference. Examples include visual arts, performance arts, audio works such as podcasts and soundscapes, game-based activities, virtual reality experiences, and more.

Program Committee sub-theme members: Michael Cox, Sergio Villamayor-Tomas

Panels

Panel 12. 1.

Governing Coupled Infrastructure Systems in Transition

co-Chairs: Marco Janssen and John Marty Anderies
Arizona State University
Details
Session 12. 1. A.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN255
Using Institutional Logics to Understand Organizational decision-making: a Study of U.S. Water Utilities
in-person
Tamee Albrecht1 and Anita Milman2
1Colorado State University, USA, 2University of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
Mapping the Patterns in City-Utility Dynamics and Climate Action
online
Eve Castille, Klaus Eisenack, Konrad Bierl, Lydia Finzel, and Matteo Roggero
Humboldt-Universität Zu Berlin, Germany
Reframing Water Management in water-scarce Cities: Social-ecological-technological System Interactions and Uncertainties Affect Amman’s Water Resilience
online
Elisabeth Krueger1, Zhao Ma2, Ghada Kassab3, and Nona Schulte-Römer4
1University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, 2Purdue University, USA, 3University of Jordan, Jordan, 4Humboldt University Berlin, Germany
Restoring Feedback Loops in land-use Transformations: Determining the Controllability Set of Sustainable land-use Interactions Using Principles From Feedback Control
online
Johann Schuur
ETH Zürich, Switzerland
Bridging Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways (DAPP) Maps with Ostrom’s Governance Theory: Method and Application in socio-ecologically Diverse Landscapes
in-person
Jean-Baptiste Pichancourt1,2, Antoine Brias1,3, and Bonis Anne1,4
1Université Clermont Auvergne (UCA), France, 2INRAE, Complex System Lab, France,3GEOLAB, France, 4CNRS, France
Session 12. 1. B.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN255
Outer Space Infrastructure: From the Cathedral to the ‘Cosmolocal’ Bazaar
online
Lucas Lemos
Tallinn University of Technology (TalTech), Estonia
Lunar Surface Sustainability From a Coupled Infrastructure Systems Perspective
in-person
Marco Janssen1, Afreen Siddiqi2, and Parvathy Prem3
1Arizona State University, United States, 2Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United States, 3John Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, United States
Titanic Lessons for Spaceship Earth to Account for Human Behavior in Institutional Design
in-person
John Anderies
Arizona State University, US
Session 12. 1. C.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN255
Assessing Pathways for small-scale Fisheries Transformation Towards Aquatic Food Systems That Address Ecological, Social and Economic Objectives
in-person
Maria Del Mar Mancha-Cisneros
Michigan State University, United States
Advancing Sustainable Tourism Through Context-Based Management: Insights From a Qualitative Meta-Analysis
in-person
Cathy Rubinos1, Isabel Guerrero Ochoa2, Bruno Chereque3, and Naara Cancino4
1Normandie Business School, France, 2Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Peru, 3School of Public Policy, London School of Economics And Political Science, United Kingdom, 4Harvard Kennedy School, United States
Russian Energy Megaprojects: Infrastructural Violence Against Arctic Indigenous social-ecological Systems
in-person
Stanislav Ksenofontov
Arcticenter, University of Northern Iowa, USA
Identifying archetypes in small-scale agricultural and livestock systems using CIS framework analysis.
in-person
Irene Pérez Ibarra, Alicia Tenza-Peral, Laura Estévez Moreno, Ismael Lare David, Javier Lacosta García, Rocío De Torre Ceijas, and Diego Arahuetes
University of Zaragoza, Spain

Panel 12. 3.

Ethics and the Commons

Chair: Stefan Partelow
University of Bonn, Germany
Details
Session 12. 3. A.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOE480
Ethical Commoning: a Framework for Orienting Values, Practices, and Capacities
in-person
Stefan Partelow1, Christopher Luederitz2, and Guido Caniglia3
1Center for Life Ethics, University of Bonn, Germany, 2McGill University, Canada, 3University of Helsinki, Finland
A Look at the Commons Through the Lens of Buddhist Ethics
in-person
Pisith San and Asimina Kouvara
Taltech-Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia
Commons and Justice : a Review
in-person
Floriane Clement and Cécile Barnaud
Dynafor, University of Toulouse, INRAE, France
Session 12. 3. B.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOE480
The Role of Ethical Frameworks in Climate Change Mitigation, Adaptation, and Resilience Policy From a Polycentric Approach
in-person
Guyma Noel
Southern New Hampshire University, United States
Navigating Collective Action Challenges: a Multi-Tiered Framework for Rural Elderly Care in China
in-person
Yaoyao Cheng
Beijing University of Chemical Technology, China

Panel 12. 5.

Commons through storytelling and verse

Chair: Hita Unnikrishnan
University of Warwick, UK
Details
Session 12. 5.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCS140
Indigenous Knowledge in Managing the Commons: Case Study of the Bedouin’s Management of Rangelands in the Jordanian Southern Badia
in-person
Mai Nusir
Brandenburg Technical University Cottbus-Senftenburg, Germany
The Uncomfortable Truths About Commons of Urban Villages
online
Paras Tyagi
Centre for Youth Culture Law And Environment, India
An ‘un’common Way of Creating Awareness About Urban Commons
online
Seema Mundoli and Harini Nagendra
Azim Premji University, India
Conveying Intersectional Experiences of Community Energy Through Verse?
online
Hita Unnikrishnan
University of Warwick, United Kingdom
Using the IAD Framework as a Storytelling Engine
online
Harini Nagendra
Director, School of Climate Change and Sustainability, Azim Premji University, Bangalore, India

Panel 12. 6.

Using Games and Experiments for Behavioral Research: Opportunities and Challenges in an Era of Abundance

co-Chairs: Minwoo Ahn1, Nathan Cook2, Marco Janssen3, Sechindra Vallury4, and Daniel DeCaro5
1University of Arizona, 2Indiana University, 3Arizona State University, 4University of Georgia, 5University of Louisville
Details
Session 12. 6. A.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILC 111
Does Chit Chat and Small Talk Matter? Analysis of Group Chat Data in Common Pool Resource Experiments
in-person
Minwoo Ahn1, Daniel DeCaro2, and Marco Janssen3
1University of Arizona, United States, 2University of Louisville, United States, 3Arizona State University, United States
Incorporating field-like Features Into Game Experiments Enhances Cooperation Measurements in Natural Resource
in-person
Maria Ignacia Rivera
Instituto Milenio en Socio-Ecología Costera, Chile
Disaggregating Information Interventions in a Groundwater Experiment
in-person
Sechindra Vallury1, Nathan Cook2, Susan Paudel1, Minwoo Ahn3, and Tom Koontz4
1University of Georgia, USA, 2Indiana University Indianapolis, USA, 3University of Arizona, USA, 4University of Washington Tacoma, USA
The Nature-Based Paradigm Shift: Using Survey Experiments to Test Targeted Water Quality Solutions
in-person
Krister Andersson
University of Notre Dame, United States
Effects of Urbanization on Cooperation for Shared Resource Governance: Insights From Field Experiments in India
in-person
Raksha Balakrishna and Marco Janssen
Arizona State University, United States of America
Session 12. 6. B.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College 245
The Role of Environmental Uncertainty in Decision Making on Resource Management
in-person
Marco Janssen and Francesca Federico
Arizona State University, United States
Sharing the Risk. Fairness Ideals in a Climate Insurance Experiment
in-person
Francesca Federico and Marco Janssen
Arizona State University, US

Panel 12. 7.

Food commons as a transformation pathway towards sustainable and just food systems

co-Chairs: Sarah Steinegger, Tianzhu Liu, Johanna Gammelgaard
University of Bern, Switzerland
Details
Session 12. 7.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN255
Commons Management of Seeds by Small Scale Agriculture: a Pathway Towards Just Food Systems
online
Juliana Melo and Genauto França Filho
Federal University of Bahia, Brazil
La Soliderie: “Épicerie Solidaire, Café Engagé”
online
Maggie Carter
La Soliderie, Switzerland
From Consumption to Commoning: Democratizing Market Relations Through Consumers’ Collective Self-Organization
online
Nicholas Pohl, Victoria Becerril Nito, Philip Balsiger, and Fabian Petutschnig
University of Neuchatel, Switzerland
“It’s All About Sharing”. Can Circular Initiatives Be Autonomous Food Spaces?
online
Deborah Lambert
VUB, Belgium

Panel 12. 8.

Commons governance for and by marginalized populations

Chair: Xavier Basurto
Details
Session 12. 8.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS 137
Small-scale Fishers self-governance Strategies for Sustainable Development
in-person
Xavier Basurto1 and Nicole Franz2
1Stanford University, United States, 2FAO, Italy
From Commons to Commerce: Food Security Tradeoffs Associated with the Transition From small-scale to large-scale Fisheries
in-person
Melissa Cronin
Duke University, United States
Enabling small-scale Fisheries Contributions to Sustainable Development Through Multidimensional Analysis
in-person
Maria Del Mar Mancha Cisneros
Michigan State University, United States
The Impact of Proximity to Urban Areas on the Dissolution of Fishing Cooperatives: Evidence From Mexico
in-person
Edward Wintergalen
Duke University, United States

Panel 12. 9.

Governing the Commons in the Eastern Context

Chair: Zhiqi Zhang
Details
Session 12. 9. A. Commons governance in strong-government society
 Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM South College SCOE470
Archetypical Patterns for Climate Adaptation Actions of Local Governments: Evidence From 289 Cities in China
in-person
Rongyu Wang
Xiamen University, China
From Data Silos to Data Pools: Data Integration Challenges in China’s Smart Cities
in-person
Yunchen Zhu
Indiana University Bloomington, United States
Common Pool Resource Governance Under the Involvement of Local Government: a Case Study of Caterpillar Fungus (Ophiocordyceps Sinensis) on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau of China
in-person
Zhiqi Zhang and Yahua Wang
Tsinghua University, China
How state-reinforced self-governance Operate in Averting the Tragedy of the Urban Commons in China
in-person
Qian Zhou
Xiamen University, China
Session 12. 9. B. Institutional Analysis and Development in China
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM South College SCOE470
How Can the Market Mechanism Be Possible in the Governance of Rural Living Environment?—— Based on the Questionnaire Survey of 976 Farmers in China’s Border Areas
in-person
Yiqing Su and Sijie Qin
School of Public Policy and Management, Guangxi University, China
How Do Social Organizations Bridge the co-production of Public Services? ——a Social Network Analysis of Sichuan Guanba Nature Reserve, China
in-person
Jingjing Cai1 and Qi Liu2
1Xiamen University, China, 2The Institute of Sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China
Synthesizing Collective Action: a Comprehensive Analysis of China’s Irrigation Commons
in-person
Mengdi Cao and Yahua Wang
Tsinghua Univeristy, China
Between Top-down and Bottom-up: Governing Community Commons Through Community Service Centre Renovation in Urban China
in-person
Yidan Gong
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, China

Panel 12. 11.

Agriculture, food systems and commons

Chair: Felipe Bravo-Pena
Details
Session 12. 11.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM South College SCOE245
Challenges to Collective Action for Pro-Environmental Behavior in Indigenous Agroecosystems of Northern Chile
in-person
Felipe Bravo-Peña
Indiana University Bloomington, United States
Is an Appellation of Origin a Common Denominator? a Case Study of Comté and PDO Cheeses From the Jura Mountains
online
Pascal Berion1 and Louis Meyer2
1Université de Franche-Comté Laboratoire Théma CNRS, France, 2Université de Franche-Comté Laboratoire CRESE et Comité Interprofessionnel de Gestion du Comté, France
Towards Regenerative Governance of the Soil Commons: a Diagnostic multi-functional Approach
online
Pablo F. Mendez
Institute of Innovation and Knowledge Management, INGENIO (CSIC-UPV), Spain
Amplifying agri-food Sustainability Pathways: a Configurational Model to Discuss the Contextual Fit of Value Chain Organizing
online
Véronique De Herde and Frédéric Dufays
Center for Social Economy - HEC ULiège, Belgium
Applying Care in Farming Through Commoning: How the participatory-guarantee-system and Collaborative price-mechanism Contribute in Building Ecological and Economic Resilience on the Example of Campiaperti, Bologna, Italy
online
Dagmar Diesner
Maastricht University, The Netherlands

Panel 12. 13.

Commons and resistances

co-Chairs: Raihan Rahman and Juan Pablo Sarmiento Barletti
Details
Session 12. 13.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN 155
Can REDD+ safeguards ‘do better’ for Indigenous Peoples and local communities? A review of standards for voluntary carbon markets
online
Juan Pablo Sarmiento Barletti1 and Anne M. Larson2
1CIFOR-ICRAF, Peru, 2CIFOR-ICRAF, USA
Resisting the Expropriation of the Commons: Democracy and Environmental Politics of Bangladesh in the Anthropocene
in-person
Raihan Rahman
University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States
Nature-Based Solutions and Spatial Justice in Amritsar Smart City: Policy and Practice
in-person
Garima Jasrotia and Dr. Kiran Singh
University of Allahabad, India
Tenure, Zoning and Forest and Landtype Classification: the Multiple Threats to and Strategies for Conserving and Regenerating the Mangar Bani Sacred Grove and the Aravalli Hill Forest Commons of the Urbanizing Delhi National Capital Region
online
Chetan Agarwal
Independent, India

Panel 12. 14.

Information technology and commons

Chair: Sola Kim
Arizona State University, USA
Details
Session 12. 14.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN 155
Is Chatgpt as Environmentally “Aware” as Humans?
in-person
Sola Kim, Jieshu Wang, and J. Marty Anderies
Arizona State University, United States
How Does Information Flow Influence Researchers’ Environmental Attitudes Balancing Scientific Fieldwork Activity and Environmental Protection in Antarctica? Insights From a social-ecological agent-based Model
online
T. Kristin Wilson
School of Science in Society, Victoria University of Wellington, Te ūnaha Matatini, Centre of Research Excellence for Complex Systems, New Zealand
Reshaping Spaces and Rules of Collective Reciprocity: Mechanisms of Information and Communication Technology Application on Farmers’ Participation in Collective Actions in Response to Disasters ——Evidence From a Rural Coastal Border Area in China
in-person
Xiaohan Chen, Yuan Xuan, Qunqi Zeng, and Yiqing Su
School of Public Policy and Management, Guangxi University, Nanning, China

Panel 12. 15.

Recent books on the Commons

Chair: Xavier Basurto
Details
Session 12. 15.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS0134
Common Boundaries: the Theory and Practice of Environmental Property
in-person
Michael Cox
Dartmouth College, United States
What It Means to Think Like a Commoner
in-person
David Bollier
Schumacher Center, United States
Governing for Transformation Towards Sustainable small-scale Fisheries
in-person
Fikret Berkes1 and Nicole Franz2
1University of Manitoba, Canada, 2Stanford University, USA

Panel 12. 16.

State and market institutions and commons

Chair: Nerea Terceiro Sanmartin
Details
Session 12. 16.
 Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN 155
The Mines of Laurion: a Commons in Classical Athens?
in-person
Nerea Terceiro Sanmartín and Christophe Flament
Université de Namur, Belgium
Beyond Substitutes: the Complementary Relationship Between Markets and Commons
in-person
Kumar Aniket
University College London (UCL), United Kingdom
Money as a Commons: the Case of Central Bank Digital Currencies
in-person
Danish Hasan Ansari, Joshua Farley, and Joseph Ament
University of Vermont, United States

Panel 12. 18.

The International Journal of the Commons (IJC): A community-based journal

co-Chairs: Sergio Villamayor-Tomas and Maria Claudia Lopez
Details
Session 12. 18.
 Monday, June 16, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Campus Center 163
The IJC: A community-based journal. A conversation with the editors.
in-person
Sergio Villamayor Tomas and Maria Claudia Lopez
University of Barcelona, Spain

Panel 12. 19.

Roundtable: An Open Forum on Undergraduate Perspectives (a discussion with undergraduate students)

Moderator: Anas Malik
Xavier University, USA
Details
Session 12. 19.
 Wednesday, June 18, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Campus Center 163
 
  • General Program
  • Panel Schedule Oral Presentations
  • Poster Presentations
  • IASC 2025 Social System Map
  • IASC 2025 Slack Workspace
  • Teamup Calendar (also see below in your local time)
  • General Program
  • Panel Schedule Oral Presentations
  • Poster Presentations
  • IASC 2025 Social System Map
  • IASC 2025 Slack Workspace
  • Teamup Calendar (also see below in your local time)

About the Conference

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