D. G. Webster
- Published in print:
- 2015
- Published Online:
- September 2016
- ISBN:
- 9780262029551
- eISBN:
- 9780262329972
- Item type:
- book
- Publisher:
- The MIT Press
- DOI:
- 10.7551/mitpress/9780262029551.001.0001
- Subject:
- Environmental Science, Nature
This book delves into the evolution of marine fisheries governance from early times to the present, showing how responsive governance works—or fails to work—in settings ranging from small-scale ...
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This book delves into the evolution of marine fisheries governance from early times to the present, showing how responsive governance works—or fails to work—in settings ranging from small-scale coastal fishing communities to international fisheries that span entire oceans. Chapter 1 provides a general overview of the state of global fisheries before describing the AC/SC framework and methods used in the historical analysis. Part I examines the economic forces that disrupt problem signals, particularly the profit disconnect. It documents the expansion of fishing effort in scope and scale and shows how the industrialization of fishing created hierarchies within the industry, as those with access to capital invested in larger and larger fleets while those without such access struggled to compete in smaller niches. Part II explores how governance institutions coevolved with fisheries economics. Specifically, it shows the widening of the power disconnect as small fishing communities were eclipsed over time by larger and larger commercial operations with greater economic and political power. It also explains how problem signals are processed by decision makers in many different regions and how the set of actors and management solutions changed over time, ultimately altering the process of responsive governance. Chapter 9 concludes with an evaluation of these results, identifying pivot points that can generate earlier, more effective response, and also calls for greater attention to exogenous forces that drive the management treadmill.Less
This book delves into the evolution of marine fisheries governance from early times to the present, showing how responsive governance works—or fails to work—in settings ranging from small-scale coastal fishing communities to international fisheries that span entire oceans. Chapter 1 provides a general overview of the state of global fisheries before describing the AC/SC framework and methods used in the historical analysis. Part I examines the economic forces that disrupt problem signals, particularly the profit disconnect. It documents the expansion of fishing effort in scope and scale and shows how the industrialization of fishing created hierarchies within the industry, as those with access to capital invested in larger and larger fleets while those without such access struggled to compete in smaller niches. Part II explores how governance institutions coevolved with fisheries economics. Specifically, it shows the widening of the power disconnect as small fishing communities were eclipsed over time by larger and larger commercial operations with greater economic and political power. It also explains how problem signals are processed by decision makers in many different regions and how the set of actors and management solutions changed over time, ultimately altering the process of responsive governance. Chapter 9 concludes with an evaluation of these results, identifying pivot points that can generate earlier, more effective response, and also calls for greater attention to exogenous forces that drive the management treadmill.