Title: |
Successful Fisheries Management |
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Author(s)/Editor(s): |
S. Cunningham, T. Bostock (eds) |
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| Pages: |
238 |
| Publisher: |
Eburon |
| ISBN: |
905972061X |
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Edition: |
Original |
| Year: |
2005 |
| Place: |
Delft |
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Fisheries management has been
characterised by failure rather than by success. Weak or
dysfunctional governance systems have resulted in fishers
operating under perverse incentive structures, leading to the
economic and biological overexploitation of fish resources, and
threatening the very existence of some species.
Amongst the widespread failure, there are nonetheless some success
stories. This book centres around seven case studies, ranging from
the Pacific halibut fishery to traditional community-based
management in India, from the Australian Northern prawn fishery to
artisanal fishing in Senegal, and from co-management initiatives
in Shetland, the management of hake fisheries in Namibia, to the
Mauritanian fish trade, each of which demonstrates some facets of
successful fisheries management.
The failure of fisheries management has been widely analysed, its
successes far less so. Successful Fisheries Management
outlines ways to improve fisheries management, by drawing on
successful management experience to identify the fundamentals of
good practice. Given the multi-faceted nature of success, there is
no unique recipe. The book suggests however that, for those
involved in the development and promotion of more effective
fisheries management, the major challenge is not to do the same
things better, but to do them differently.
Author's/Publisher's Text |
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