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Understanding and contextualizing social impacts from the privatization of fisheries: An overview
Authors:Julia Olson
Institution:Northeast Fisheries Science Center, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 166 Water St., Woods Hole, MA 02543-1026, USA
Abstract:Fisheries management around the world has experimented with regulations to promote privatization, in order to reach such multifaceted goals as ending overfishing and reducing economic inefficiencies. This review surveys a wide range of empirical experiences in different contexts around the world to help provide a fuller picture of potential and sometimes disparate consequences from privatization in general and new ways of organizing around fishing that can follow in the wake of such measures. Looking at the many different participants in the fishing industry—from crew, small-boat owners, to households and communities—as well as the diverse sociocultural contexts in which fishing takes place, enables a better understanding of who and what is impacted, how they are impacted, why and with what further consequences, such that communities come to be seen less oppositional to economy, but rather constituted by multiple scalar processes and by economic relations comprising different motivations and behaviors.
Keywords:CDQ  Community Development Quota (Alaska  United States)  CQE  Community Quota Entity (Gulf of Alaska  United States  EEZ  Exclusive Economic Zone  GRT  Gross registered tons  IFQ  Individual fishing quota  ITQ  Individual transferable quota  NOAA  National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (United States)  PEI  Prince Edward Island (Canada)  QMS  Quota management system (Australia)  SCOQ  Surf clam and ocean quahog fishery (Mid-Atlantic  United States)  SETF  South East Trawl fishery (Australia)  TAC  Total allowable catch  TURFs  Territorial use rights in fisheries
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