1. A new look at property and its implications for development
2. Possession and property: the core institutions of non-capitalist
and capitalist societies
3. Property: a necessary condition of development
3a. What kind of development, for whom and in which time
frame?
3b. Learning from the introduction of property rights into the
possession-based regime of British India
4. Property rights and economic rationality: ecological and social
considerations
4a. The tradition of Thorstein Velblen and critical institutional
economics
4b. The property aspect of property and its implications for
economic growth
4c. Why the possession aspect of property is subject to the entropy
law: Lessons from ecological economics
5. “Property regimes in resource management” : necessary differentiations
between common, private, State, and “open access” regimes
6. Fourteen theses on property, exhaustible resources, and development
References