Dear Janus, There has been a great deal of scholarship and practice building on the work of Elinor Ostrom. Just last week there were hundreds of papers citing her presented at the International Association for the Study of the Commons conference (see https://www.iasc2019.org ). However, she is not the only one who has worked on the commons, and her work did not explicitly address women's rights to the commons, so it is not surprising that this blog does not cite her. If you are interested in learning more about recent work on the commons, I would suggest you look at the International Journal of the Commons (https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/ )
Dear Janus, There has been a great deal of scholarship and practice building on the work of Elinor Ostrom. Just last week there were hundreds of papers citing her presented at the International Association for the Study of the Commons conference (see https://www.iasc2019.org ). However, she is not the only one who has worked on the commons, and her work did not explicitly address women's rights to the commons, so it is not surprising that this blog does not cite her. If you are interested in learning more about recent work on the commons, I would suggest you look at the International Journal of the Commons (https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/ )