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Towards a functional typology of small-scale fisheries co-management informed by stakeholder perceptions: A coral reef case study
Institution:1. Northern Institute, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Northern Territory 0909, Australia;2. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Arafura Timor Research Facility, 23 Ellengowan Dr., Brinkin, Northern Territory 0810, Australia;3. Institute for Applied Ecology and ANZSOG Institute for Governance, University of Canberra, Bruce, ACT 2601, Australia;1. Universidade Federal do Paraná, Centro de Estudos do Mar. Av. Beira Mar s/n, Pontal do Sul. Pontal do Paraná/PR Cep 83.255-976, Brazil;2. University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, Barbados;1. Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Ecology (ZMT), Fahrenheitstrasse 6, 28359 Bremen, Germany;2. Mnazi-Bay Ruvuma Estuary Marine Park (MBREMP), P.O. Box 845, Mtwara, Tanzania;3. Research Office, Davao del Norte State College, New Visayas, 8105 Panabo, Philippines;4. Aquaculture and Fisheries Group Wageningen University, The Netherlands;5. Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture, Faculty of Fisheries and Marine Sciences & Technology, University of Ruhuna, Matara 81000, Sri Lanka
Abstract:Co-management has gained significant traction in small-scale fisheries as part of the solution for resolving economic inefficiency, unsustainable harvesting and unequal distribution of benefits derived from fisheries, generating some promising results. Most studies, however, present co-management as the sharing of power between resource users and centralised government, and do not explicitly consider the role of a more diverse set of stakeholders, or what roles different stakeholder types are best positioned to perform. This paper contributes to our understanding of stakeholder diversity by determining, through surveys with 133 fishery stakeholders in Solomon Islands, which stakeholder types are perceived as most suited to particular co-management roles, and which stakeholder types should be collaborating to increase fishery stocks. The effect of respondent socio-demographics, on perceived roles, is tested to explore the value of the role typology. Ten dominant roles were identified across seven stakeholder types, including collaboration and raising awareness, which were perceived to be dominantly the domain of auxiliary stakeholders that are not explicitly recognised in the co-management literature, including NGOs and church leaders. Of the socio-demographic variables tested, only site explained some of the variation in stakeholder roles perceived by respondents. The primary value of the typology lies in its potential to be used as a basis for dialogue on strengths and weaknesses of allocated roles for increasing fish stocks in existing co-management systems.
Keywords:Collaboration network  Coral reefs  Natural resource management  Roles  Socio-demographic attributes  Solomon Islands
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