Siegfried von Ciriacy-Wantrup


Siegfried von Ciriacy-Wantrup was born in Langenberg, Germany in 1906. After doing his master's work in Illinois, he returned to Bonn to get his Ph.D. in 1931. In 1936, he left Nazi Germany for the United States, arriving at UC Berkeley and the in 1938.
He died in 1980 at the Men's Faculty Club.

Academic work

Career highlights:
Wantrup's work on the institutions of natural resource management is neither well-known nor widely cited.
2008 Wantrup Fellow, David Zetland, has a series of blog posts at that point out the relevance of his opinions on the importance of institutions with respect to natural resources.
Of particular interest is Wantrup's notion of three decision levels: At the highest level is basic law, which affects the second-level decisions on how to form institutions. These institutions—in turn—affect third-level decisions of how to allocate water. Wantrup points out that economists who critique decisions at the third level are perhaps missing the importance of constraints or influence coming from the second level. His critique, which dates from the 1960s, is still relevant—economists still spend most of their time on optimal decisions without taking institutions into account. In taking his institutional approach, Wantrup discussed and integrated common property, the impacts of tenure rights on conservation, the Precautionary Principle, conservation land use planning, and the importance of endangered species and biodiversity.
Wantrup derived criteria for sustainability that included the "Safe Minimum Standard", irreversibility, and unknown future probability. He also wrote on the “Extramarket Values” of collective goods.

Legacy

Ciriacy-Wantrup left a sizable bequest to the University of California that is used to fund the "S.V. Ciriacy-Wantrup Postdoctoral Fellowships in Natural Resource Economics and Political Economy," which are awarded according to the following criteria:

For the purposes of this fellowship, natural resources are defined broadly to include environmental resources. The fellowship encourages, but is not limited to, policy-oriented research. Applications are open to scholars from any social science discipline, and related professional fields such as law and planning, who will make significant contributions to research on natural resource economics broadly defined. Preference will be given to proposals whose orientation is broadly institutional and/or historical, and which are conceptually and theoretically innovative.

Four postdoctoral fellowships are awarded each year, for one year with an option to renew for a second year. Visiting Research Fellowships are awarded for a single year only to academics with PhDs awarded no more than ten years in the past.
The Land Trust of Napa County manages the that was established in 1982. It is a oak woodland preserve in Pope Valley where oak reforestation studies and graduate research takes place.

Publications

Ciriacy-Wantrup on