CONCEPT
Swiss Alpine Commons
The communal alpine meadows of Switzerland, managed by village communities since at least 1517 — one of
Ostrom's most carefully documented cases and the empirical source of her analysis of graduated sanctions in the village of Törbel.
The Swiss alpine commons are village-managed communal meadows used for summer cattle grazing, documented in Swiss communities for at least five centuries. Ostrom drew heavily on
Robert Netting's ethnographic research on Törbel, a village in the Valais canton, to illustrate how durable commons governance actually works. The Törbel case supplied the canonical example of
graduated sanctions: first violations received informal neighbor visits, second violations triggered formal reports and modest fines, and only repeated egregious violations brought full
community assembly consequences.
In The You On AI Field Guide
What distinguishes the Swiss alpine commons is the combination of institutional sophistication with apparent institutional simplicity. The rules are not complex by modern legal standards. Each villager has rights to graze a number of cattle proportional to the hay they can produce from private land — a rule that automatically couples grazing pressure to local capacity. Monitoring operates through social networks in a community where reputation matters