Back to Search Start Over

Links in the Fish Chain

Authors :
Andy Thorpe
Derek Johnson
Maarten Bavinck
Michel Kulbicki
Kooiman, J. (ed.)
Bavinck, M. (ed.)
Jentoft, S. (ed.)
Pullin, R. (ed.)
Source :
Fish for Life. :133-144
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Amsterdam University Press, 2005.

Abstract

As the preceding chapters of this section have demonstrated, resource regulation has not been the strong suit of fisheries. Each chapter has identified serious problems of, or challenges to, governance in the world’s fisheries: over-fishing, human-induced ecosystem shifts, threats to livelihoods, pollution, over-dependence on marine sources of fish feed, and quality control. These are well-known problems that have in recent years prompted increasing recognition that fisheries governance has been inadequate to the challenge of maintaining sustainability and livelihoods in maritime areas. While not to excuse governance failures, the preceding chapters have provided a major reason for them: the diversity, complexity, and dynamics of the main segments of the fish chain that we identify militate against the establishment of straightforward, effective governance mechanisms. This task is rendered even more complex when the attempt is made to incorporate all of the segments of the chain into a whole. The intent of this chapter is to reflect on the constitution of the fish chain or, really, the multiple intertwined fish chains that extend from the world’s fisheries, and then to assess the governance challenges specific to governing the interactions within entire fish chains. Both of these tasks have been anticipated in the introductory chapters to this volume and in this section of the book. We begin this chapter with a short reflection on the representation of the chain.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Fish for Life
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....47556a17ff28669e93c55442c5dc1ff9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/9789048505326.009