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Pacific halibut --- Pacific halibut fisheries --- Groundfish fisheries --- Fishery policy --- Bycatches
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Pacific halibut fisheries. --- Flétan de l'Atlantique --- Flétan du Pacifique --- Pêche --- Recueils. --- Pêche commerciale.
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Pacific halibut fisheries. --- Flétan de l'Atlantique --- Flétan du Pacifique --- Pêche --- Recueils. --- Pêche commerciale.
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Sea birds --- Longlining (Fisheries) --- Pacific halibut fisheries --- Pacific halibut fishing --- Electronic monitoring in fisheries --- Video recording in wildlife management --- Effect of fishing on --- Mortality --- Monitoring --- Bycatches
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How can we manage a so-called "renewable" natural resource such as a fishery when we don't know how renewable it really is? James A. Crutchfield and Arnold Zellner developed a dynamic and highly successful economic approach to this problem, drawing on extensive data from the Pacific halibut industry. Although the U.S. Department of the Interior published a report about their findings in 1962, it had very limited distribution and is now long out of print. This book presents a complete reprint of Crutchfield and Zellner's pioneering study, together with a new introduction by the authors and four new papers by other scholars. These new studies cover the history of the Pacific halibut industry as well as the general and specific contributions of the original work-such as price-oriented conservation policy-to the fields of resource economics and management. The resulting volume integrates theory and practice in a clear, well-contextualized case study that will be important not just for environmental and resource economists, but also for leaders of industries dependent on any natural resource.
Pacific halibut fisheries --- Pacific halibut --- Economic aspects. --- Conservation. --- conservation, marine animals, fishery, natural resources, environment, environmentalism, pacific, halibut, fishing industry, nonfiction, management, resource economics, port pricing, fishermen, price determination, science, nature, species, population, sustainability, zellner, crutchfield, agriculture, biology, preservation.
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Rich with detail and provocatively argued, this study of the development of property rights in the world's fisheries tells the story of one industry's evolution and provides a useful illustration of the forces that shape economic institutions. The emergence of exclusive individual rights of access in the fishing industry began after the revolution in the international law of the sea that took place in the 1970s, when the offshore area controlled by a nation for fish and other resources expanded from 3 miles to 200 miles. Rognvaldur Hannesson compares the subsequent development of private property rights in the fisheries to the historic enclosures and clearances of common land in England and Scotland and finds many parallels, including bitter fights over access rights and the impossibility of accommodating all those who want to stake a claim. Overall benefit to society in the form of increased efficiency, he points out, does not mean that all benefit equally. After tracing the development of the law of the sea since the sixteenth century, Hannesson considers what form property rights in fisheries might take and examines the forces behind the establishment of exclusive use rights to fish. He argues that one form of exclusive use rights, individual transferable quotas (ITQs), best promotes efficiency in the use of fish resources. He presents case studies of ITQ development, ranging from successful establishment in Canada and New Zealand to failures in Chile and Norway to experiments with ITQs in Iceland and the United States. The development of economic institutions, he concludes, is an evolutionary process subject to contradictory influences.
Fishery management --- Fisheries --- Economic aspects. --- Limited entry licenses. --- Groundfish fisheries --- Limited entry licenses in fisheries --- Limited entry permits in fisheries --- Pacific halibut fisheries --- Fish management --- Fisheries management --- Fishery resources --- Licenses --- Limited entry --- Limited entry permits --- Limited entry licenses --- Management --- Aquatic resources --- Wildlife management --- Fish counting towers --- Overfishing --- ECONOMICS/Political Economy --- ECONOMICS/Environmental Economics
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