Ostrom’s Commons Governance Reading of AI IGF 2023 Geneva — Self-governance of common resources

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This essay applies the framework of Institutional Economics — most prominently associated with Elinor Ostrom — to analyze the AI IGF 2023 Geneva conference from a management perspective. Target audience: executives, MBA students, management researchers, consultants, and policy analysts.

Executive Summary

Ostrom (Nobel Prize 2009) in Governing the Commons presented eight design principles by which common resources can be self-governed by communities, neither market nor state. The internet is a typical global commons.

For firms operating in Switzerland and adjacent AI規制, 生成AI, AI倫理 domains, this essay maps how to incorporate the conference debate into strategic decision-making through the lens of Self-governance of common resources.

Framework

Design principles for the internet commons

To what extent does AI IGF's governance satisfy the eight principles — clear boundaries, congruence with local conditions, collective choice, monitoring, graduated sanctions, dialogic conflict resolution, recognition of self-governance, nested enterprises? Stakeholders in Switzerland have much to learn from this evaluation.

The theoretical framework of Elinor Ostrom provides a lens to read the 2023 debate not as mere "industry trends" but as a precursor of structural change. The fact that this is a global-level discussion has direct strategic implications for the geographic scope of the target market.

Eight design principles

For practical application, we map the applicability of Self-governance of common resources to each topic at the conference.

1. Application to "AI規制"

The discussion on "AI規制" can be located, in Elinor Ostrom's framework, as a primary strategic variable.

Concrete managerial implications include:

  • Implications for Switzerland's market: early identification of regulatory trends and preemptive business-model adjustment
  • Impact on competitive advantage: monitoring competitors' moves and reviewing one's differentiation strategy
  • Investment decisions: allocation of R&D investment and reconfiguration of the portfolio

2. Application to "生成AI"

The discussion on "生成AI" can be located, in Elinor Ostrom's framework, as an important constraint.

Concrete managerial implications include:

  • Implications for Switzerland's market: early identification of regulatory trends and preemptive business-model adjustment
  • Impact on competitive advantage: monitoring competitors' moves and reviewing one's differentiation strategy
  • Investment decisions: allocation of R&D investment and reconfiguration of the portfolio

3. Application to "AI倫理"

The discussion on "AI倫理" can be located, in Elinor Ostrom's framework, as an auxiliary topic.

Concrete managerial implications include:

  • Implications for Switzerland's market: early identification of regulatory trends and preemptive business-model adjustment
  • Impact on competitive advantage: monitoring competitors' moves and reviewing one's differentiation strategy
  • Investment decisions: allocation of R&D investment and reconfiguration of the portfolio

4. Application to "国連連携"

The discussion on "国連連携" can be located, in Elinor Ostrom's framework, as an auxiliary topic.

Concrete managerial implications include:

  • Implications for Switzerland's market: early identification of regulatory trends and preemptive business-model adjustment
  • Impact on competitive advantage: monitoring competitors' moves and reviewing one's differentiation strategy
  • Investment decisions: allocation of R&D investment and reconfiguration of the portfolio

5. Application to "WSIS成果"

The discussion on "WSIS成果" can be located, in Elinor Ostrom's framework, as an auxiliary topic.

Concrete managerial implications include:

  • Implications for Switzerland's market: early identification of regulatory trends and preemptive business-model adjustment
  • Impact on competitive advantage: monitoring competitors' moves and reviewing one's differentiation strategy
  • Investment decisions: allocation of R&D investment and reconfiguration of the portfolio

Strategy Map

Strategic Actions for Firms Operating in Switzerland

We translate the management analysis above into concrete actions for firms operating in Switzerland.

Short-term (within 6 months)

  1. Intelligence gathering: closely read the AI IGF 2023 minutes and reports; share with the corporate strategy function
  2. Stakeholder mapping: identify relevant regulators, industry associations, and civil society organizations
  3. Risk assessment: quantify potential impacts of the regulatory directions under discussion

Medium-term (1–3 years)

  1. Capability building: close the capability gaps identified through the Self-governance of common resources framework
  2. Alliance strategy: cultivate relationships with the international IGF community
  3. Regulatory dialogue: shift from reactive compliance to proactive agenda-setting

Long-term (3–10 years)

  1. Business model reconstruction: structural transformation informed by Elinor Ostrom's framework
  2. Contribution to international standard-setting: sustained participation in venues like AI IGF
  3. Norm formation from Switzerland: accumulation of soft power through distinctive contributions to international debate

ROI Analysis Perspective

In Elinor Ostrom's framework, ROI of investment in AI IGF participation is evaluated not as a single-year financial metric but as multi-year option value. This aligns with the "real options" approach to decision-making under uncertainty.

Dimension Short-term ROI Long-term option value
Direct financial Limited Medium–Large
Network capital Medium Large
Brand / legitimacy Medium Large
Policy intelligence Large Medium–Large
Talent development Medium Large

Conclusion: A Question to Executives

Reading AI IGF 2023 through the auxiliary line of Elinor Ostrom's framework, the conference emerges not as a mere international gathering but as a site of contemporary implementation of Self-governance of common resources. Executives in Switzerland face a strategic choice: passive observer or active participant.

This essay argues that the latter choice is indispensable for building long-term competitive advantage. Elinor Ostrom's theoretical insight provides the intellectual foundation for that strategic choice.


Primary Sources

Secondary Sources (Management)

  • Works of Elinor Ostrom (representative texts of Institutional Economics)

*This piece belongs to the academic essays (management series). Strategic proposals are illustrative applications of general analytical frameworks; specific business judgments require individual due diligence.*

更新履歴

第1稿投稿 2026年6月5日 12時14分(記事コンテンツアップ)

— 中澤祐樹