Search
You searched for:
Start Over
History
Remove constraint History
Subject
Fisheries management
Remove constraint Subject: Fisheries management
« Previous | 1 - 10 of 13 | Next »
Search Results
-
For more than a century, politicians, newspaper editors, tate and federal fisheries managers, and their various constituencies with an interest in salmon have complained,lobbied and petitioned, sought ...
Citation -
Illegal behavior among fishermen is often explained using models that abstract from the moral and the political realm. These same models may also abstract from the institutional realities of law making ...
Citation -
The research for this paper was triggered by a stunning judgement of the Icelandic Supreme Court in December 1998, which declared as unconstitutional existing fisheries laws on individual transferable ...
Citation -
4. [Article] Climate and Fisheries: Costs and Benefits of Change
Many records provide the bases for a clearer understanding of the roles of climate regime shifts and short-term perturbations in ecosystem dynamics, hence fisheries responses. Too few have taken the long ...Citation -
5. [Article] The Coral Triangle Initiative: new Climate Change adaptation initiative in fisheries management
Abstract only.Citation -
The evolution of the Quota Management System of fisheries management in New Zealand has been accompanied by four innovations in the specific mechanisms used by government to collect revenue from commercial fishers ...
Citation -
Fishery villages (Van Chai) has been formed for about 300 years since pioneered fishers settled in Phan Thiet for their livelihoods. This was a original social professional organization found before official ...
Citation -
8. [Article] Use Rights in Fishery Systems
This paper provides an overview of use rights, that sanction fishers, fisher groups and fishing communities to access and use fishery resources. The paper first reviews the various forms of use rights, ...Citation -
10. [Article] Fisheries Management and Rule of Law
Fishing is one of the most intensively regulated industries in the U.S. economy. Theoretically, regulating an industry means subjecting it to the rule of law: treating those with an interest in the resource ...Citation