-
What is the tragedy of the commons? - Nicholas Amendolare
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View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/what-is-the-tragedy-of-the-commons-nicholas-amendolare
Is it possible that overfishing, super germs, and global warming are all caused by the same thing? In 1968, a man named Garrett Hardin sat down to write an essay about overpopulation. Within it, he discovered a pattern of human behavior that explains some of history’s biggest problems. Nicholas Amendolare describes the tragedy of the commons.
Lesson by Nicholas Amendolare, directed by TED-Ed.
Thank you so much to our patrons for your support! Without you this video would not be possible.
Brandy Jones, John Ess, Jessica James, Tom Lee, Stephen Michael Alvarez, Hoang Ton, Jason Weinstein, Juliana, Alexander Walls, Kris Siverhus, Ab...
published: 21 Nov 2017
-
The Tragedy of the Commons
In this video, we take a look at common goods. Common resources are nonexcludable but rival. For instance, no one can be excluded from fishing for tuna, but they are rival — for every tuna caught, there is one less for everyone else. Nonexcludable but rival resources often lead to what we call a “tragedy of the commons.” In the case of tuna, this means the collapse of the fishing stock. Under a tragedy of the commons, a resource is often overused and under-maintained. Why does this happen? And how can we solve this problem? Like we’ve done so many times throughout this course, let’s take a look at the incentives at play. We also discuss Nobel Prize Winner Elinor Ostrom’s contributions to this topic.
Microeconomics Course: http://bit.ly/20VablY
Next video: http://bit.ly/1SUt3SN
Help us c...
published: 26 Jun 2015
-
Ending The Tragedy of The Commons | Elinor Ostrom | Big Think
Ending The Tragedy of The Commons
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink/youtube
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Nobel-prize winning economist argues that, contrary to the widespread theory, with the right governance, humans are likely to forge peaceful solutions to coping with resource scarcity.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Elinor Ostrom:
Elinor Ostrom was awarded the 2009 Nobel Memorial Prize in the Economic Sciences for her analysis of economic governance and commons law. She is the Arthur F. Bentley Professor of Political Science and Co-Director of the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis at Indiana Uni...
published: 24 Apr 2012
-
The Tragedy of the Commons Explained in One Minute
This concept, that William Forster Lloyd wrote about back in 1833, tells us a lot about... well, about ourselves. Watch this video and then think about some of the various situations in which humans only cared about their short-term self-interest throughout history.
The tragedy of the commons tells us that such situations (in which we focus exclusively on our self-interest and refuse to see the bigger picture) can have devastating effects for society as a whole.
Please like, comment and subscribe if you found the video interesting.
To support the channel, give me a minute (see what I did there?) of your time by visiting OneMinuteEconomics.com and reading my message.
Bitcoin donations can be sent to 1AFYgM8Cmiiu5HjcXaP5aS1fEBJ5n3VDck and PayPal donations to oneminuteeconomics@gmail.com,...
published: 23 Jul 2016
-
Tragedy of the Commons
Learn how the tragedy of the commons contributes to plastic pollution and explore solutions in this 4:52 minute video lesson.
The tragedy of the commons is a situation in which individuals acting in their own self-interest behave contrary to the common good of all others by depleting or spoiling a shared resource through their collective action. The phenomenon was first described by the British economist William Forster Lloyd in 1833. Lloyd observed that because grazing on the commons (fields that were open to anyone) was free, the land was spoiled, which diminished the value of the fields for everyone. Can you think of a free resource that’s possibly subject to the same tragedy? Sharks might!
SUPPORT us to discover more econ concepts!
https://www.patreon.com/sprouts 🐦:
DOWNLOAD vide...
published: 31 Mar 2022
-
Tragedy of the Commons │ The Problem with Open Access
The semantics of the model I'm working from use common goods/common property/ common pool resources (resources used by multiple people) and common property regimes (the institutions or social arrangements between people, the property rights regarding common pool resources).
We were taught that "the commons" is sort of an old term. It has issues because it blankets both common pool resources with no communication, no rules, no accountability, no punishment for those who break the rules, etc. (open access) and common pool resources with some cooperation or institution in place (common property regimes).
When you get away from those aspects that allow people to trust one another and work together, the system looks like an open access system. The tragedy of the commons model describes wha...
published: 10 Jun 2015
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What are commons?
Many human beings are willing to put individual benefits aside and cooperate for the common good. The number of citizens' collectives in Europe is booming. This leads to a growing demand for knowledge and know-how. Researchers from universities all over the world are stepping in. In July they gather in Utrecht.
published: 09 Oct 2018
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Amble - The Commons (Official Audio)
"The Commons" out now: https://amble.lnk.to/thecommons
Our new EP "The Commons" is out November 1st. Pre-save here: https://amble.lnk.to/thecommons
"The Commons" was written on a train journey from Dublin to Longford. A letter was left on the table of an empty carriage "No Date, No Name". This letter told the heartbreaking story of a mother losing her 14 year old son to suicide.
The subject matter of suicide will always be a difficult topic to discuss, let alone write about - but the letter only highlighted the many other friends, students and family members whose lives have been affected by suicide. "The Commons" was written before that train journey was over.
The name of the song "The Commons" shows the unfortunate familiarity of the topic in question. We can all picture that "common...
published: 04 Oct 2024
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What is the Tragedy of the Commons?
Unfortunately, there are strong incentives for people to exploit these resources when they are held in common by everyone. As Prof. Sean Mulholland at Stonehill College explains, the 'tragedy of the commons' occurs when individuals acting independently end up depleting shared resources, such as fisheries or pastureland. Prof. Mulholland discusses two potential solutions to this problem: public ownership, where the property is owned and administered by the government, and private ownership. He discusses the strengths and weaknesses to each approach and some key considerations for determining which institutions best protect useful resources.
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published: 29 Jun 2011
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Sustainable development and the tragedy of commons
Stockholm whiteboard seminars: Elinor Ostrom explains how people can use natural resources in a sustainable way based on the diversity that exists in the world.
published: 03 Apr 2009
4:58
What is the tragedy of the commons? - Nicholas Amendolare
Check out our Patreon page: https://www.patreon.com/teded
View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/what-is-the-tragedy-of-the-commons-nicholas-amendolare
...
Check out our Patreon page: https://www.patreon.com/teded
View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/what-is-the-tragedy-of-the-commons-nicholas-amendolare
Is it possible that overfishing, super germs, and global warming are all caused by the same thing? In 1968, a man named Garrett Hardin sat down to write an essay about overpopulation. Within it, he discovered a pattern of human behavior that explains some of history’s biggest problems. Nicholas Amendolare describes the tragedy of the commons.
Lesson by Nicholas Amendolare, directed by TED-Ed.
Thank you so much to our patrons for your support! Without you this video would not be possible.
Brandy Jones, John Ess, Jessica James, Tom Lee, Stephen Michael Alvarez, Hoang Ton, Jason Weinstein, Juliana, Alexander Walls, Kris Siverhus, Abhijit Kiran Valluri, Morgan Williams, Annamaria Szilagyi, Sama aafghani, Hannah Beth, Peter Owen, Mandeep Singh, سلطان الخليفي, Vinicius Lhullier, Marylise CHAUFFETON, Connor Wytko, Quinn Shen, Joshua Plant, Jayant Sahewal, Marvin Vizuett.
https://wn.com/What_Is_The_Tragedy_Of_The_Commons_Nicholas_Amendolare
Check out our Patreon page: https://www.patreon.com/teded
View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/what-is-the-tragedy-of-the-commons-nicholas-amendolare
Is it possible that overfishing, super germs, and global warming are all caused by the same thing? In 1968, a man named Garrett Hardin sat down to write an essay about overpopulation. Within it, he discovered a pattern of human behavior that explains some of history’s biggest problems. Nicholas Amendolare describes the tragedy of the commons.
Lesson by Nicholas Amendolare, directed by TED-Ed.
Thank you so much to our patrons for your support! Without you this video would not be possible.
Brandy Jones, John Ess, Jessica James, Tom Lee, Stephen Michael Alvarez, Hoang Ton, Jason Weinstein, Juliana, Alexander Walls, Kris Siverhus, Abhijit Kiran Valluri, Morgan Williams, Annamaria Szilagyi, Sama aafghani, Hannah Beth, Peter Owen, Mandeep Singh, سلطان الخليفي, Vinicius Lhullier, Marylise CHAUFFETON, Connor Wytko, Quinn Shen, Joshua Plant, Jayant Sahewal, Marvin Vizuett.
- published: 21 Nov 2017
- views: 3138843
10:36
The Tragedy of the Commons
In this video, we take a look at common goods. Common resources are nonexcludable but rival. For instance, no one can be excluded from fishing for tuna, but the...
In this video, we take a look at common goods. Common resources are nonexcludable but rival. For instance, no one can be excluded from fishing for tuna, but they are rival — for every tuna caught, there is one less for everyone else. Nonexcludable but rival resources often lead to what we call a “tragedy of the commons.” In the case of tuna, this means the collapse of the fishing stock. Under a tragedy of the commons, a resource is often overused and under-maintained. Why does this happen? And how can we solve this problem? Like we’ve done so many times throughout this course, let’s take a look at the incentives at play. We also discuss Nobel Prize Winner Elinor Ostrom’s contributions to this topic.
Microeconomics Course: http://bit.ly/20VablY
Next video: http://bit.ly/1SUt3SN
Help us caption & translate this video!
http://amara.org/v/GkqC/
Help us caption & translate this video!
http://amara.org/v/IUH7/
https://wn.com/The_Tragedy_Of_The_Commons
In this video, we take a look at common goods. Common resources are nonexcludable but rival. For instance, no one can be excluded from fishing for tuna, but they are rival — for every tuna caught, there is one less for everyone else. Nonexcludable but rival resources often lead to what we call a “tragedy of the commons.” In the case of tuna, this means the collapse of the fishing stock. Under a tragedy of the commons, a resource is often overused and under-maintained. Why does this happen? And how can we solve this problem? Like we’ve done so many times throughout this course, let’s take a look at the incentives at play. We also discuss Nobel Prize Winner Elinor Ostrom’s contributions to this topic.
Microeconomics Course: http://bit.ly/20VablY
Next video: http://bit.ly/1SUt3SN
Help us caption & translate this video!
http://amara.org/v/GkqC/
Help us caption & translate this video!
http://amara.org/v/IUH7/
- published: 26 Jun 2015
- views: 337662
4:42
Ending The Tragedy of The Commons | Elinor Ostrom | Big Think
Ending The Tragedy of The Commons
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink/youtube
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge
-----------------...
Ending The Tragedy of The Commons
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink/youtube
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Nobel-prize winning economist argues that, contrary to the widespread theory, with the right governance, humans are likely to forge peaceful solutions to coping with resource scarcity.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Elinor Ostrom:
Elinor Ostrom was awarded the 2009 Nobel Memorial Prize in the Economic Sciences for her analysis of economic governance and commons law. She is the Arthur F. Bentley Professor of Political Science and Co-Director of the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis at Indiana University in Bloomington and Research Professor and the Founding Director of the Center for the Study of Institutional Diversity at Arizona State University in Tempe. She received her B.A., M.A., and Ph.D from UCLA and is the author of numerous books, including "Understanding Institutional Diversity."
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: Can you explain your work regarding the tragedy of the commons?
Elinor Ostrom: Well, Mensor, no, sorry, not Mensor, he came later, Gerharten wrote a very stirring article in 1968, published in science, and he imagined a pasture opened to all and posited that if that were the case, then everyone would bring their animals on and they would keep bringing more and more and more and they would eventually overuse the commons. What he went on to say was that they were trapped and could not themselves get out of it. And what our theoretical work and empirical work has shown, is that in many instances, but not all, people have found ways of agreeing on their own rules and extracting themselves from the problem.
Question: Is there an alternative to top-down government or free market solutions?
Elinor Ostrom: Yeah. This is the, this concept of polycentricity of enabling both market and governments at multiple scales to interact with community organization so that we have a complex nested system. and it ain't pretty in the sense that it's nice and neat and many people have tried to get rid of creative solutions that are complex, but society is complex, people are complex. And for us to have simple solutions to complex problems, not a good idea.
Question: Can your research on the commons teach us about climate change?
Elinor Ostrom: If the community at play were only the entire planet and we simply wait until the big guys make a decision, we're in deep trouble. Our theoretical work on polycentricity here is very relevant in that while in any greenhouse gas omission, does have a global effect, it may also have, and usually does, local and regional effects. So we need to be thinking about how to enhance the ways of organizing around the local and regional so as to produce more externalities that are positive at the global.
Question: Have there been any particularly misguided government actions in this area?
Elinor Ostrom: Well, a great number of the policies laid down, let's take the policies for eastern Africa related to the pasture area that the Masai occupied. The Masai had been there for centuries and had figured out a way of grazing over a great distance so that in an area where the rainfall was limited and spotty, they were able to maintain that range land in very good form. It didn't look pretty, as that's the way it was, but if you graze down too far, and then you let some other things come up and don't graze in an area and you get big bushes, then you end up with ruining the functioning of it. Well, when the Brits came in, they gave half of it—well, I shouldn't say that, not half—they gave a very large segment away to colonial farmers and to set up a big reserve. The Kenyan government in the 1950's onward kept giving away, giving away, giving away. They finally created group ranches, but the group ranches weren't large enough to really enable them to maintain the kind of system that worked. They the have been privatizing themselves, the Masai, their land, so it would not be given away again by the government, and working out arrangements so that family and friends can share and they're recreating the movement of the cattle around, and Esther [IB] has done a wonderful job of studying this over time and they may, the local people may again find a way of coping with a very difficult and challenging environment.
Recorded on: October 25, 2009
https://wn.com/Ending_The_Tragedy_Of_The_Commons_|_Elinor_Ostrom_|_Big_Think
Ending The Tragedy of The Commons
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink/youtube
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Nobel-prize winning economist argues that, contrary to the widespread theory, with the right governance, humans are likely to forge peaceful solutions to coping with resource scarcity.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Elinor Ostrom:
Elinor Ostrom was awarded the 2009 Nobel Memorial Prize in the Economic Sciences for her analysis of economic governance and commons law. She is the Arthur F. Bentley Professor of Political Science and Co-Director of the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis at Indiana University in Bloomington and Research Professor and the Founding Director of the Center for the Study of Institutional Diversity at Arizona State University in Tempe. She received her B.A., M.A., and Ph.D from UCLA and is the author of numerous books, including "Understanding Institutional Diversity."
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: Can you explain your work regarding the tragedy of the commons?
Elinor Ostrom: Well, Mensor, no, sorry, not Mensor, he came later, Gerharten wrote a very stirring article in 1968, published in science, and he imagined a pasture opened to all and posited that if that were the case, then everyone would bring their animals on and they would keep bringing more and more and more and they would eventually overuse the commons. What he went on to say was that they were trapped and could not themselves get out of it. And what our theoretical work and empirical work has shown, is that in many instances, but not all, people have found ways of agreeing on their own rules and extracting themselves from the problem.
Question: Is there an alternative to top-down government or free market solutions?
Elinor Ostrom: Yeah. This is the, this concept of polycentricity of enabling both market and governments at multiple scales to interact with community organization so that we have a complex nested system. and it ain't pretty in the sense that it's nice and neat and many people have tried to get rid of creative solutions that are complex, but society is complex, people are complex. And for us to have simple solutions to complex problems, not a good idea.
Question: Can your research on the commons teach us about climate change?
Elinor Ostrom: If the community at play were only the entire planet and we simply wait until the big guys make a decision, we're in deep trouble. Our theoretical work on polycentricity here is very relevant in that while in any greenhouse gas omission, does have a global effect, it may also have, and usually does, local and regional effects. So we need to be thinking about how to enhance the ways of organizing around the local and regional so as to produce more externalities that are positive at the global.
Question: Have there been any particularly misguided government actions in this area?
Elinor Ostrom: Well, a great number of the policies laid down, let's take the policies for eastern Africa related to the pasture area that the Masai occupied. The Masai had been there for centuries and had figured out a way of grazing over a great distance so that in an area where the rainfall was limited and spotty, they were able to maintain that range land in very good form. It didn't look pretty, as that's the way it was, but if you graze down too far, and then you let some other things come up and don't graze in an area and you get big bushes, then you end up with ruining the functioning of it. Well, when the Brits came in, they gave half of it—well, I shouldn't say that, not half—they gave a very large segment away to colonial farmers and to set up a big reserve. The Kenyan government in the 1950's onward kept giving away, giving away, giving away. They finally created group ranches, but the group ranches weren't large enough to really enable them to maintain the kind of system that worked. They the have been privatizing themselves, the Masai, their land, so it would not be given away again by the government, and working out arrangements so that family and friends can share and they're recreating the movement of the cattle around, and Esther [IB] has done a wonderful job of studying this over time and they may, the local people may again find a way of coping with a very difficult and challenging environment.
Recorded on: October 25, 2009
- published: 24 Apr 2012
- views: 97552
1:29
The Tragedy of the Commons Explained in One Minute
This concept, that William Forster Lloyd wrote about back in 1833, tells us a lot about... well, about ourselves. Watch this video and then think about some of ...
This concept, that William Forster Lloyd wrote about back in 1833, tells us a lot about... well, about ourselves. Watch this video and then think about some of the various situations in which humans only cared about their short-term self-interest throughout history.
The tragedy of the commons tells us that such situations (in which we focus exclusively on our self-interest and refuse to see the bigger picture) can have devastating effects for society as a whole.
Please like, comment and subscribe if you found the video interesting.
To support the channel, give me a minute (see what I did there?) of your time by visiting OneMinuteEconomics.com and reading my message.
Bitcoin donations can be sent to 1AFYgM8Cmiiu5HjcXaP5aS1fEBJ5n3VDck and PayPal donations to oneminuteeconomics@gmail.com, any and all support is greatly appreciated!
Oh and I've also started playing around with Patreon, my link is:
https://www.patreon.com/oneminuteeconomics
Interested in reading a good book?
My first book, Wealth Management 2.0 (through which I do my best to help people manage their wealth properly, whether we're talking about someone who has a huge amount of money at his disposal or someone who is still living paycheck to paycheck), can be bought using the links below:
Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/Wealth-Management-2-0-Financial-Professionals-ebook/dp/B01I1WA2BK
Barnes & Noble - http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/wealth-management-20-andrei-polgar/1124435282?ean=2940153328942
iBooks (Apple) - https://itun.es/us/wYSveb.l
Kobo - https://store.kobobooks.com/en-us/ebook/wealth-management-2-0
My second book, the Wall Street Journal and USA Today bestseller The Age of Anomaly (through which I help people prepare for financial calamities and become more financially resilient in general), can be bought using the links below.
Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/Age-Anomaly-Spotting-Financial-Uncertainty-ebook/dp/B078SYL5YS
Barnes & Noble - https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-age-of-anomaly-andrei-polgar/1127084693?ean=2940155383970
iBooks (Apple) - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/age-anomaly-spotting-financial-storms-in-sea-uncertainty/id1331704265
Kobo - https://www.kobo.com/ww/en/ebook/the-age-of-anomaly-spotting-financial-storms-in-a-sea-of-uncertainty
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https://ro.linkedin.com/in/andrei-polgar-9a11a561
https://wn.com/The_Tragedy_Of_The_Commons_Explained_In_One_Minute
This concept, that William Forster Lloyd wrote about back in 1833, tells us a lot about... well, about ourselves. Watch this video and then think about some of the various situations in which humans only cared about their short-term self-interest throughout history.
The tragedy of the commons tells us that such situations (in which we focus exclusively on our self-interest and refuse to see the bigger picture) can have devastating effects for society as a whole.
Please like, comment and subscribe if you found the video interesting.
To support the channel, give me a minute (see what I did there?) of your time by visiting OneMinuteEconomics.com and reading my message.
Bitcoin donations can be sent to 1AFYgM8Cmiiu5HjcXaP5aS1fEBJ5n3VDck and PayPal donations to oneminuteeconomics@gmail.com, any and all support is greatly appreciated!
Oh and I've also started playing around with Patreon, my link is:
https://www.patreon.com/oneminuteeconomics
Interested in reading a good book?
My first book, Wealth Management 2.0 (through which I do my best to help people manage their wealth properly, whether we're talking about someone who has a huge amount of money at his disposal or someone who is still living paycheck to paycheck), can be bought using the links below:
Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/Wealth-Management-2-0-Financial-Professionals-ebook/dp/B01I1WA2BK
Barnes & Noble - http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/wealth-management-20-andrei-polgar/1124435282?ean=2940153328942
iBooks (Apple) - https://itun.es/us/wYSveb.l
Kobo - https://store.kobobooks.com/en-us/ebook/wealth-management-2-0
My second book, the Wall Street Journal and USA Today bestseller The Age of Anomaly (through which I help people prepare for financial calamities and become more financially resilient in general), can be bought using the links below.
Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/Age-Anomaly-Spotting-Financial-Uncertainty-ebook/dp/B078SYL5YS
Barnes & Noble - https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-age-of-anomaly-andrei-polgar/1127084693?ean=2940155383970
iBooks (Apple) - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/age-anomaly-spotting-financial-storms-in-sea-uncertainty/id1331704265
Kobo - https://www.kobo.com/ww/en/ebook/the-age-of-anomaly-spotting-financial-storms-in-a-sea-of-uncertainty
Last but not least, if you'd like to follow me on social media, use one of the links below:
https://www.facebook.com/oneminuteeconomics
https://twitter.com/andreipolgar
https://ro.linkedin.com/in/andrei-polgar-9a11a561
- published: 23 Jul 2016
- views: 270471
4:52
Tragedy of the Commons
Learn how the tragedy of the commons contributes to plastic pollution and explore solutions in this 4:52 minute video lesson.
The tragedy of the commons is a s...
Learn how the tragedy of the commons contributes to plastic pollution and explore solutions in this 4:52 minute video lesson.
The tragedy of the commons is a situation in which individuals acting in their own self-interest behave contrary to the common good of all others by depleting or spoiling a shared resource through their collective action. The phenomenon was first described by the British economist William Forster Lloyd in 1833. Lloyd observed that because grazing on the commons (fields that were open to anyone) was free, the land was spoiled, which diminished the value of the fields for everyone. Can you think of a free resource that’s possibly subject to the same tragedy? Sharks might!
SUPPORT us to discover more econ concepts!
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DOWNLOAD video without ads and background music 🤫:
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THANKS to our patrons
This video was made with the support of our Patrons: Adam G, Badrah, Andrea Basilio Rava, Angela, Bettina Kind, Brilliant Minds Learning, Broke, Cedric Wang, Daniel Kramer, David Markham, Denis Kraus, Digital INnov8ors, Don Bone, Enrique Arellano Farias, Esther Chiang, Eva Marie Koblin, Gatsby Dkdc, Ginger, Hal Beltran, Ich kann Deutsch und es war einfach, Jannes Croon, Jeffrey Cassianna, Joanne Doyle, Johan Klassen, John Zhang, Jonathan Schwarz, Judy Roland, kritik bhimani, Liskaya, Marcel, Margaret Grace, Maria, Marq Short, Mathis Nu, Mezes.Macko, Muhammad Humayun, Nancy Bueffler, Okan Elibol, Peter Bishop, Petra, Raman Srivastava, Raymond Fujioka, Reynir Örn Bachmann Guðmundsson, Robert Cook, Scripz, Shao Xiang, Sergei Kukhariev, Si, Susan Schuster, Stephen Clark, Stephen, Tetiana Gerasymova, Tristan Scifo, Tsungren Yang, Victor Paweletz, Vishruth Harithsa, Wolfgang Vullhorst and all the others. Thank you! To join them visit www.patreon.com/sprouts
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Chapter
00:00 Introduction
00:47 Tragedy of the Commons theory
01:31 Social Norms
02:01 Privatization
02:33 State Regulation
03:50 What do you think?
04:15 Ending
https://wn.com/Tragedy_Of_The_Commons
Learn how the tragedy of the commons contributes to plastic pollution and explore solutions in this 4:52 minute video lesson.
The tragedy of the commons is a situation in which individuals acting in their own self-interest behave contrary to the common good of all others by depleting or spoiling a shared resource through their collective action. The phenomenon was first described by the British economist William Forster Lloyd in 1833. Lloyd observed that because grazing on the commons (fields that were open to anyone) was free, the land was spoiled, which diminished the value of the fields for everyone. Can you think of a free resource that’s possibly subject to the same tragedy? Sharks might!
SUPPORT us to discover more econ concepts!
https://www.patreon.com/sprouts 🐦:
DOWNLOAD video without ads and background music 🤫:
https://sproutsschools.com/video-lessons/
SIGN UP to our mailing list and never miss a new video from us 🔔:
http://eepurl.com/dNU4BQ
SOURCES and teaching resources 🎓:
https://sproutsschools.com/tragedy-of-the-commons/
CONTRIBUTE by upvoting your favorite topic or suggesting new ones :
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THANKS to our patrons
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COLLABORATORS
Script: Jonas Koblin
Artist: Pascal Gaggelli
Voice: Mithril
Coloring: Nalin
Editing: Peera Lertsukittipongsa
Head of Partnership Program: Selina Bador
Production: Morgan Lizop, Bianka
Proofreading: Susan
Sound Design: Miguel Ojeda
Classroom exercise: Morgan Lizop
SOUNDTRACKS
Toys Are Alive - Studio Le Bus
Terror Avenue - Jack Pierce
On http://sproutsschools.com, you will also find:
- Links to all our sources
- Ideas for a classroom projects for each video
- The full script, core graphics and additional resources
- The video without background music (good for divergent minds)
Chapter
00:00 Introduction
00:47 Tragedy of the Commons theory
01:31 Social Norms
02:01 Privatization
02:33 State Regulation
03:50 What do you think?
04:15 Ending
- published: 31 Mar 2022
- views: 80816
3:27
Tragedy of the Commons │ The Problem with Open Access
The semantics of the model I'm working from use common goods/common property/ common pool resources (resources used by multiple people) and common property regi...
The semantics of the model I'm working from use common goods/common property/ common pool resources (resources used by multiple people) and common property regimes (the institutions or social arrangements between people, the property rights regarding common pool resources).
We were taught that "the commons" is sort of an old term. It has issues because it blankets both common pool resources with no communication, no rules, no accountability, no punishment for those who break the rules, etc. (open access) and common pool resources with some cooperation or institution in place (common property regimes).
When you get away from those aspects that allow people to trust one another and work together, the system looks like an open access system. The tragedy of the commons model describes what happens in that open access system. But not what happens when a common property regime is in place. But the term "commons" doesn't distinguish between the two.
Further watching
Some Field Ecology
" Allan Savory: How to green the world's deserts and reverse climate change"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vpTHi...
Patreon https://patreon.com/user?u=849925
https://wn.com/Tragedy_Of_The_Commons_│_The_Problem_With_Open_Access
The semantics of the model I'm working from use common goods/common property/ common pool resources (resources used by multiple people) and common property regimes (the institutions or social arrangements between people, the property rights regarding common pool resources).
We were taught that "the commons" is sort of an old term. It has issues because it blankets both common pool resources with no communication, no rules, no accountability, no punishment for those who break the rules, etc. (open access) and common pool resources with some cooperation or institution in place (common property regimes).
When you get away from those aspects that allow people to trust one another and work together, the system looks like an open access system. The tragedy of the commons model describes what happens in that open access system. But not what happens when a common property regime is in place. But the term "commons" doesn't distinguish between the two.
Further watching
Some Field Ecology
" Allan Savory: How to green the world's deserts and reverse climate change"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vpTHi...
Patreon https://patreon.com/user?u=849925
- published: 10 Jun 2015
- views: 412888
2:47
What are commons?
Many human beings are willing to put individual benefits aside and cooperate for the common good. The number of citizens' collectives in Europe is booming. This...
Many human beings are willing to put individual benefits aside and cooperate for the common good. The number of citizens' collectives in Europe is booming. This leads to a growing demand for knowledge and know-how. Researchers from universities all over the world are stepping in. In July they gather in Utrecht.
https://wn.com/What_Are_Commons
Many human beings are willing to put individual benefits aside and cooperate for the common good. The number of citizens' collectives in Europe is booming. This leads to a growing demand for knowledge and know-how. Researchers from universities all over the world are stepping in. In July they gather in Utrecht.
- published: 09 Oct 2018
- views: 4674
5:25
Amble - The Commons (Official Audio)
"The Commons" out now: https://amble.lnk.to/thecommons
Our new EP "The Commons" is out November 1st. Pre-save here: https://amble.lnk.to/thecommons
"The Commo...
"The Commons" out now: https://amble.lnk.to/thecommons
Our new EP "The Commons" is out November 1st. Pre-save here: https://amble.lnk.to/thecommons
"The Commons" was written on a train journey from Dublin to Longford. A letter was left on the table of an empty carriage "No Date, No Name". This letter told the heartbreaking story of a mother losing her 14 year old son to suicide.
The subject matter of suicide will always be a difficult topic to discuss, let alone write about - but the letter only highlighted the many other friends, students and family members whose lives have been affected by suicide. "The Commons" was written before that train journey was over.
The name of the song "The Commons" shows the unfortunate familiarity of the topic in question. We can all picture that "common" area - whether it be the green of a housing estate, a local park, or a football field where kids and teenagers meet to play.
"The Commons" was not written to try and shed light on any solution or agenda, rather it is the expression of a feeling at a given time. Although the song, the letter and the topic itself are extremely sad, the ultimate feeling leaving that train carriage was of hope. The instrumental at the end of "The Commons" is the musical expression of that hope.
Amble are •
Robbie Cunningham
Ross McNerney
Oisin McCaffrey
Follow Amble
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@ambleofficial
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ambleofficial
X: https://x.com/ambleofficial_
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Ambleband
Lyrics:
My name is called
Wait one more play
Your dinner is cold
She would say
Can I go?
The green awaits
I won’t forget to smile
Outside golden gates
I’ll leave a letter on a train
No date , No name
For a stranger to turn and read
And for a moment, i'll be free
We’ll walk for miles
And candles will flame
I’ll write more letters
No date, No name
Can I go ?
The green awaits
I wont forget to smile
Outside golden gates
I’ll Leave a letter on a train
No date , No name
For a stranger to turn and read
And for a moment, i'll be free
Why him? Too young
Too soon
I don’t wanna be the adult in the room
Can he go ?
The green awaits
I’m sure he smiled
Outside golden gates
#amble #thecommons
https://wn.com/Amble_The_Commons_(Official_Audio)
"The Commons" out now: https://amble.lnk.to/thecommons
Our new EP "The Commons" is out November 1st. Pre-save here: https://amble.lnk.to/thecommons
"The Commons" was written on a train journey from Dublin to Longford. A letter was left on the table of an empty carriage "No Date, No Name". This letter told the heartbreaking story of a mother losing her 14 year old son to suicide.
The subject matter of suicide will always be a difficult topic to discuss, let alone write about - but the letter only highlighted the many other friends, students and family members whose lives have been affected by suicide. "The Commons" was written before that train journey was over.
The name of the song "The Commons" shows the unfortunate familiarity of the topic in question. We can all picture that "common" area - whether it be the green of a housing estate, a local park, or a football field where kids and teenagers meet to play.
"The Commons" was not written to try and shed light on any solution or agenda, rather it is the expression of a feeling at a given time. Although the song, the letter and the topic itself are extremely sad, the ultimate feeling leaving that train carriage was of hope. The instrumental at the end of "The Commons" is the musical expression of that hope.
Amble are •
Robbie Cunningham
Ross McNerney
Oisin McCaffrey
Follow Amble
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@ambleofficial
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ambleofficial
X: https://x.com/ambleofficial_
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Ambleband
Lyrics:
My name is called
Wait one more play
Your dinner is cold
She would say
Can I go?
The green awaits
I won’t forget to smile
Outside golden gates
I’ll leave a letter on a train
No date , No name
For a stranger to turn and read
And for a moment, i'll be free
We’ll walk for miles
And candles will flame
I’ll write more letters
No date, No name
Can I go ?
The green awaits
I wont forget to smile
Outside golden gates
I’ll Leave a letter on a train
No date , No name
For a stranger to turn and read
And for a moment, i'll be free
Why him? Too young
Too soon
I don’t wanna be the adult in the room
Can he go ?
The green awaits
I’m sure he smiled
Outside golden gates
#amble #thecommons
- published: 04 Oct 2024
- views: 44248
3:20
What is the Tragedy of the Commons?
Unfortunately, there are strong incentives for people to exploit these resources when they are held in common by everyone. As Prof. Sean Mulholland at Stonehill...
Unfortunately, there are strong incentives for people to exploit these resources when they are held in common by everyone. As Prof. Sean Mulholland at Stonehill College explains, the 'tragedy of the commons' occurs when individuals acting independently end up depleting shared resources, such as fisheries or pastureland. Prof. Mulholland discusses two potential solutions to this problem: public ownership, where the property is owned and administered by the government, and private ownership. He discusses the strengths and weaknesses to each approach and some key considerations for determining which institutions best protect useful resources.
SUBSCRIBE:
http://bit.ly/1HVAtKP
FOLLOW US:
- Website: https://www.learnliberty.org/
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LearnLiberty
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/LearnLiberty
- Google +: http://bit.ly/1hi66Zz
LEARN LIBERTY
Your resource for exploring the ideas of a free society. We tackle big questions about what makes a society free or prosperous and how we can improve the world we live in. Watch more at http://bit.ly/1UleLbP
https://wn.com/What_Is_The_Tragedy_Of_The_Commons
Unfortunately, there are strong incentives for people to exploit these resources when they are held in common by everyone. As Prof. Sean Mulholland at Stonehill College explains, the 'tragedy of the commons' occurs when individuals acting independently end up depleting shared resources, such as fisheries or pastureland. Prof. Mulholland discusses two potential solutions to this problem: public ownership, where the property is owned and administered by the government, and private ownership. He discusses the strengths and weaknesses to each approach and some key considerations for determining which institutions best protect useful resources.
SUBSCRIBE:
http://bit.ly/1HVAtKP
FOLLOW US:
- Website: https://www.learnliberty.org/
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LearnLiberty
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/LearnLiberty
- Google +: http://bit.ly/1hi66Zz
LEARN LIBERTY
Your resource for exploring the ideas of a free society. We tackle big questions about what makes a society free or prosperous and how we can improve the world we live in. Watch more at http://bit.ly/1UleLbP
- published: 29 Jun 2011
- views: 398934
8:27
Sustainable development and the tragedy of commons
Stockholm whiteboard seminars: Elinor Ostrom explains how people can use natural resources in a sustainable way based on the diversity that exists in the world....
Stockholm whiteboard seminars: Elinor Ostrom explains how people can use natural resources in a sustainable way based on the diversity that exists in the world.
https://wn.com/Sustainable_Development_And_The_Tragedy_Of_Commons
Stockholm whiteboard seminars: Elinor Ostrom explains how people can use natural resources in a sustainable way based on the diversity that exists in the world.
- published: 03 Apr 2009
- views: 146484
-
Concurrency (road) Top # 5 Facts
Concurrency (road) Top # 5 Facts
published: 26 Oct 2015
-
Concurrency (road)
A concurrency in a road network is an instance of one physical roadway bearing two or more different highway, motorway, or other route numbers
published: 16 Dec 2018
-
Concurrency Vs Parallelism!
Get a Free System Design PDF with 158 pages by subscribing to our weekly newsletter: https://bit.ly/bytebytegoytTopic
Animation tools: Adobe Illustrator and After Effects.
Checkout our bestselling System Design Interview books:
Volume 1: https://amzn.to/3Ou7gkd
Volume 2: https://amzn.to/3HqGozy
The digital version of System Design Interview books: https://bit.ly/3mlDSk9
ABOUT US:
Covering topics and trends in large-scale system design, from the authors of the best-selling System Design Interview series.
published: 09 Jul 2024
-
"Concurrency Options on the JVM" by Jessica Kerr
A careful design lets you write a concurrent application without thinking about deadlock or synchronization. Getting to that design takes a lot of thinking. This session delivers the background you need to make good decisions about concurrency tools. You’ll learn what’s available in Java, including how to tune an ExecutorService for your threading needs. After that, learn how this impacts higher-level abstractions in JVM languages: choose from various Futures, Scala's akka actors, and Clojure's core.async coroutines. Whether you’re working in pure Java or the best concurrency models the JVM has to offer, this session will help you make design decisions that keep your code deadlock-free.
Jessica Kerr
Outpace
@jessitron
Jessica Kerr is a Java turned Scala turned Clojure developer, with for...
published: 21 Sep 2014
-
Dave Piech shares his thoughts on road and traffic concurrency
As your commissioner, I plan to continue to work on improving road and traffic concurrency here in Santa Rosa County. Establishing this level of service is critical to our community's success!
published: 31 Oct 2022
-
Wrong-way concurrency Meaning
Video shows what wrong-way concurrency means. A road concurrency in which at least two numbered highway routes are signed in opposite, conflicting directions on the same stretch of physical roadway.. Wrong-way concurrency Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say wrong-way concurrency. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
published: 01 May 2015
-
Route Concurrency and Reference Event Support
LinearBench Ninja is an LRS web app built on Esri's Roads and Highways Server. This video introduces two new features: Reference Layers and Route Concurrency.
published: 27 Dec 2021
-
Road Trip #781 - US-61 S - Missouri - Hayti - I-55 S Concurrency
Road Trip #781 - US-61 South - Missouri - Hayti - I-55 South Concurrency
Upon leaving Portageville, US-61 gets back onto I-55, and heads south into Pemiscot County. We pass through the city of Hayti, where I-55 and US-61 have an interchange with US Highway 412 and I-155, which leads into Tennessee. We conclude at Exit 8, where US-61 parts from I-55 to make its final run to the Arkansas border.
Index:
00:00 1. Intro
00:16 2. New Madrid County, Missouri
00:43 3. Pemiscot County, Missouri
05:57 4. Hayti, Pemiscot County, Missouri
06:17 5. Pemiscot County, Missouri
10:47 6. Outro
Music licensed by http://artlist.io
We are jasonh300 and sippigrrrl!
Follow us on social media:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/504roadtrips/
https://www.patreon.com/504roadtrips/
Facts and information in our...
published: 24 Jun 2022
-
highway concurrency signs along U.S. 69 and U.S. ALT 69 in southern Kansas 5/2/17
I found these highway concurrency signs along U.S. 69 and U.S. ALT 69 also involving U.S. 400 and U.S. 160 to be interesting. The date is May 2, 2017 and we're traveling from KC to northwest Arkansas and then back to St. Louis. The location is in southern Kansas south of Pittsburg, principally in Cherokee County.
published: 06 May 2017
-
Concurrency is not Parallelism by Rob Pike
Slides:
https://talks.golang.org/2012/waza.slide
published: 11 Nov 2015
2:01
Concurrency (road)
A concurrency in a road network is an instance of one physical roadway bearing two or more different highway, motorway, or other route numbers
A concurrency in a road network is an instance of one physical roadway bearing two or more different highway, motorway, or other route numbers
https://wn.com/Concurrency_(Road)
A concurrency in a road network is an instance of one physical roadway bearing two or more different highway, motorway, or other route numbers
- published: 16 Dec 2018
- views: 58
4:13
Concurrency Vs Parallelism!
Get a Free System Design PDF with 158 pages by subscribing to our weekly newsletter: https://bit.ly/bytebytegoytTopic
Animation tools: Adobe Illustrator and Af...
Get a Free System Design PDF with 158 pages by subscribing to our weekly newsletter: https://bit.ly/bytebytegoytTopic
Animation tools: Adobe Illustrator and After Effects.
Checkout our bestselling System Design Interview books:
Volume 1: https://amzn.to/3Ou7gkd
Volume 2: https://amzn.to/3HqGozy
The digital version of System Design Interview books: https://bit.ly/3mlDSk9
ABOUT US:
Covering topics and trends in large-scale system design, from the authors of the best-selling System Design Interview series.
https://wn.com/Concurrency_Vs_Parallelism
Get a Free System Design PDF with 158 pages by subscribing to our weekly newsletter: https://bit.ly/bytebytegoytTopic
Animation tools: Adobe Illustrator and After Effects.
Checkout our bestselling System Design Interview books:
Volume 1: https://amzn.to/3Ou7gkd
Volume 2: https://amzn.to/3HqGozy
The digital version of System Design Interview books: https://bit.ly/3mlDSk9
ABOUT US:
Covering topics and trends in large-scale system design, from the authors of the best-selling System Design Interview series.
- published: 09 Jul 2024
- views: 102549
42:17
"Concurrency Options on the JVM" by Jessica Kerr
A careful design lets you write a concurrent application without thinking about deadlock or synchronization. Getting to that design takes a lot of thinking. Thi...
A careful design lets you write a concurrent application without thinking about deadlock or synchronization. Getting to that design takes a lot of thinking. This session delivers the background you need to make good decisions about concurrency tools. You’ll learn what’s available in Java, including how to tune an ExecutorService for your threading needs. After that, learn how this impacts higher-level abstractions in JVM languages: choose from various Futures, Scala's akka actors, and Clojure's core.async coroutines. Whether you’re working in pure Java or the best concurrency models the JVM has to offer, this session will help you make design decisions that keep your code deadlock-free.
Jessica Kerr
Outpace
@jessitron
Jessica Kerr is a Java turned Scala turned Clojure developer, with forays into Ruby. She works for Outpace, speaks at conferences here and in Europe, blogs, tweets, and encourages two daughters to question her authority.
https://wn.com/Concurrency_Options_On_The_Jvm_By_Jessica_Kerr
A careful design lets you write a concurrent application without thinking about deadlock or synchronization. Getting to that design takes a lot of thinking. This session delivers the background you need to make good decisions about concurrency tools. You’ll learn what’s available in Java, including how to tune an ExecutorService for your threading needs. After that, learn how this impacts higher-level abstractions in JVM languages: choose from various Futures, Scala's akka actors, and Clojure's core.async coroutines. Whether you’re working in pure Java or the best concurrency models the JVM has to offer, this session will help you make design decisions that keep your code deadlock-free.
Jessica Kerr
Outpace
@jessitron
Jessica Kerr is a Java turned Scala turned Clojure developer, with forays into Ruby. She works for Outpace, speaks at conferences here and in Europe, blogs, tweets, and encourages two daughters to question her authority.
- published: 21 Sep 2014
- views: 11752
1:22
Dave Piech shares his thoughts on road and traffic concurrency
As your commissioner, I plan to continue to work on improving road and traffic concurrency here in Santa Rosa County. Establishing this level of service is crit...
As your commissioner, I plan to continue to work on improving road and traffic concurrency here in Santa Rosa County. Establishing this level of service is critical to our community's success!
https://wn.com/Dave_Piech_Shares_His_Thoughts_On_Road_And_Traffic_Concurrency
As your commissioner, I plan to continue to work on improving road and traffic concurrency here in Santa Rosa County. Establishing this level of service is critical to our community's success!
- published: 31 Oct 2022
- views: 18
0:36
Wrong-way concurrency Meaning
Video shows what wrong-way concurrency means. A road concurrency in which at least two numbered highway routes are signed in opposite, conflicting directions on...
Video shows what wrong-way concurrency means. A road concurrency in which at least two numbered highway routes are signed in opposite, conflicting directions on the same stretch of physical roadway.. Wrong-way concurrency Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say wrong-way concurrency. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
https://wn.com/Wrong_Way_Concurrency_Meaning
Video shows what wrong-way concurrency means. A road concurrency in which at least two numbered highway routes are signed in opposite, conflicting directions on the same stretch of physical roadway.. Wrong-way concurrency Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say wrong-way concurrency. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
- published: 01 May 2015
- views: 142
2:04
Route Concurrency and Reference Event Support
LinearBench Ninja is an LRS web app built on Esri's Roads and Highways Server. This video introduces two new features: Reference Layers and Route Concurrency.
LinearBench Ninja is an LRS web app built on Esri's Roads and Highways Server. This video introduces two new features: Reference Layers and Route Concurrency.
https://wn.com/Route_Concurrency_And_Reference_Event_Support
LinearBench Ninja is an LRS web app built on Esri's Roads and Highways Server. This video introduces two new features: Reference Layers and Route Concurrency.
- published: 27 Dec 2021
- views: 46
11:08
Road Trip #781 - US-61 S - Missouri - Hayti - I-55 S Concurrency
Road Trip #781 - US-61 South - Missouri - Hayti - I-55 South Concurrency
Upon leaving Portageville, US-61 gets back onto I-55, and heads south into Pemiscot Co...
Road Trip #781 - US-61 South - Missouri - Hayti - I-55 South Concurrency
Upon leaving Portageville, US-61 gets back onto I-55, and heads south into Pemiscot County. We pass through the city of Hayti, where I-55 and US-61 have an interchange with US Highway 412 and I-155, which leads into Tennessee. We conclude at Exit 8, where US-61 parts from I-55 to make its final run to the Arkansas border.
Index:
00:00 1. Intro
00:16 2. New Madrid County, Missouri
00:43 3. Pemiscot County, Missouri
05:57 4. Hayti, Pemiscot County, Missouri
06:17 5. Pemiscot County, Missouri
10:47 6. Outro
Music licensed by http://artlist.io
We are jasonh300 and sippigrrrl!
Follow us on social media:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/504roadtrips/
https://www.patreon.com/504roadtrips/
Facts and information in our videos come from Wikipedia and other sources, and may or may not be factual.
https://wn.com/Road_Trip_781_US_61_S_Missouri_Hayti_I_55_S_Concurrency
Road Trip #781 - US-61 South - Missouri - Hayti - I-55 South Concurrency
Upon leaving Portageville, US-61 gets back onto I-55, and heads south into Pemiscot County. We pass through the city of Hayti, where I-55 and US-61 have an interchange with US Highway 412 and I-155, which leads into Tennessee. We conclude at Exit 8, where US-61 parts from I-55 to make its final run to the Arkansas border.
Index:
00:00 1. Intro
00:16 2. New Madrid County, Missouri
00:43 3. Pemiscot County, Missouri
05:57 4. Hayti, Pemiscot County, Missouri
06:17 5. Pemiscot County, Missouri
10:47 6. Outro
Music licensed by http://artlist.io
We are jasonh300 and sippigrrrl!
Follow us on social media:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/504roadtrips/
https://www.patreon.com/504roadtrips/
Facts and information in our videos come from Wikipedia and other sources, and may or may not be factual.
- published: 24 Jun 2022
- views: 2055
0:55
highway concurrency signs along U.S. 69 and U.S. ALT 69 in southern Kansas 5/2/17
I found these highway concurrency signs along U.S. 69 and U.S. ALT 69 also involving U.S. 400 and U.S. 160 to be interesting. The date is May 2, 2017 and we're ...
I found these highway concurrency signs along U.S. 69 and U.S. ALT 69 also involving U.S. 400 and U.S. 160 to be interesting. The date is May 2, 2017 and we're traveling from KC to northwest Arkansas and then back to St. Louis. The location is in southern Kansas south of Pittsburg, principally in Cherokee County.
https://wn.com/Highway_Concurrency_Signs_Along_U.S._69_And_U.S._Alt_69_In_Southern_Kansas_5_2_17
I found these highway concurrency signs along U.S. 69 and U.S. ALT 69 also involving U.S. 400 and U.S. 160 to be interesting. The date is May 2, 2017 and we're traveling from KC to northwest Arkansas and then back to St. Louis. The location is in southern Kansas south of Pittsburg, principally in Cherokee County.
- published: 06 May 2017
- views: 139