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The most widespread instance of a common is the public right-of-way, a.k.a. public roads.
While commons are generally seen as a system opposed to private property, the ideas have been combined in the idea of "common property", which are resources "owned" equally by every member of the community, even though the community recognises that only a limited number of members may use the resource at any given time.
The act of transferring resources from the commons to individual ownership is known as "enclosure."
The commons in English common-law (History)
Public utility, Almende
See also: