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Something old, something new: Historical perspectives provide lessons for blue growth agendas

Authors :
Sally C. Y. Lau
Jonas Hentati-Sundberg
Matthew McKenzie
Georg H. Engelhard
Emily S. Klein
Ruth H. Thurstan
Julián Botero
Philine S. E. zu Ermgassen
Johnathan E. Ball
Brian R. MacKenzie
Heidi K. Alleway
Robert Thorpe
Massimiliano Cardinale
Julia Lajus
Henn Ojaveer
Saša Raicevich
Ana Judith Giraldo
Bayden D. Russell
Peter Jones
Tomaso Fortibuoni
John N. Kittinger
Ann Katrien Lescrauwaet
Bryony A. Caswell
John M. Pandolfi
Gesche Krause
Dmitry Lajus
Andreas Sundelöf
Margit Eero
Source :
EPIC3Fish and Fisheries, WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, 21, pp. 774-796, ISSN: 1467-2960, Fish and Fisheries, Caswell, B A, Klein, E S, Alleway, H K, Ball, J E, Botero, J, Cardinale, M, Eero, M, Engelhard, G H, Fortibuoni, T, Giraldo, A-J, Hentati-Sundberg, J, Jones, P, Kittinger, J N, Krause, G, Lajus, D L, Lajus, J, Lau, S C Y, Lescrauwaet, A-K, MacKenzie, B R, McKenzie, M, Ojaveer, H, Pandolfi, J M, Raicevich, S, Russell, B D, Sundelöf, A, Thorpe, R B, zu Ermgassen, P S E & Thurstan, R H 2020, ' Something old, something new: Historical perspectives provide lessons for blue growth agendas ', Fish and Fisheries, vol. 21, no. 4, pp. 774-796 . https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12460, Caswell, B, Klein, E S, Alleway, H K & Zu Ermgassen, P 2020, ' Something old, something new: historical perspectives provide lessons for blue growth agendas ', Fish and fisheries . https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12460
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

The concept of “blue growth,” which aims to promote the growth of ocean economies while holistically managing marine socioecological systems, is emerging within na-tional and international marine policy. The concept is often promoted as being novel; however, we show that historical analogies exist that can provide insights for contem-porary planning and implementation of blue growth. Using a case-study approach based on expert knowledge, we identified 20 historical fisheries or aquaculture ex-amples from 13 countries, spanning the last 40–800 years, that we contend embody blue growth concepts. This is the first time, to our knowledge, that blue growth has been investigated across such broad spatial and temporal scales. The past societies managed to balance exploitation with equitable access, ecological integrity and/or economic growth for varying periods of time. Four main trajectories existed that led to the success or failure of blue growth. Success was linked to equitable rather than open access, innovation and management that was responsive, holistic and based on scientific knowledge and monitoring. The inability to achieve or maintain blue growth resulted from failures to address limits to industry growth and/or anticipate the im-pacts of adverse extrinsic events and drivers (e.g. changes in international markets, war), the prioritization of short-term gains over long-term sustainability, and loss of supporting systems. Fourteen cross-cutting lessons and 10 recommendations were derived that can improve understanding and implementation of blue growth. Despite the contemporary literature broadly supporting our findings, these recommenda-tions are not adequately addressed by agendas seeking to realize blue growth.

Details

ISSN :
14672979 and 14672960
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Fish and Fisheries
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....487e9506c8fae2630ebc84091571080b