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Abstract
Research and policy on property rights, collective action and watershed
management requires good understanding of ecological and socio-political processes at
different social-spatial scales. On-farm soil erosion is a plot or farm-level problem that
can be mitigated through more secure property rights for individual farmers, while the
sedimentation of streams and deterioration of water quality are larger-scale problems that
may require more effective collective action and / or more secure property rights at the
village or catchment scale. Differences in social-political contexts across nations and
regions also shape property rights and collective action institutions. For example,
circumstances in the Lake Victoria basin in East Africa require particular attention to
collective action and property rights problems in specific “hot spot” areas where insecure
tenure leads to overuse or under-investment. Circumstances in the uplands of Southeast
Asia require analysis of the opportunities for negotiating more secure rights for farmers
in exchange for stronger collective action by farmer groups for maintaining essential
watershed functions.