Management issues in the fisheries commons

This dissertation addresses three issues in managing the fisheries commons: international sharing; international agreements; and property rights management. The overall purpose is to move towards providing consistent and broadly applicable analysis of fisheries management issues by conducting stu...

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Main Author: McWhinnie, Stephanie F.
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/18518
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-185182018-01-05T17:39:29Z Management issues in the fisheries commons McWhinnie, Stephanie F. This dissertation addresses three issues in managing the fisheries commons: international sharing; international agreements; and property rights management. The overall purpose is to move towards providing consistent and broadly applicable analysis of fisheries management issues by conducting studies at an internationally comparable level. The first issue examined is whether fish stocks that are internationally shared are systematically more exploited than solely owned stocks. With the use of a newly compiled database that includes economic and biological characteristics along with the exploitation status of nearly two hundred fish stocks from around the globe, it is found that sharing is indeed a detrimental force in determining stock status. - The second issue is the natural next question of what effect international agreements have on shared fish stocks. Incorporating information on international cooperative and access agreements into the exploitation status database allows a first-pass analysis of the average effect of cooperative and access agreements on fish stocks. The final issue considered is the impact on productivity of the introduction of property rights management regimes. A parallel analysis of a traditional productivity approach and an index number decomposition to establish the source of productivity changes is conducted on a unique vessel-level dataset of the Norwegian coastal cod fishery and finds that the introduction of individual vessel quotas raised productivity. Arts, Faculty of Vancouver School of Economics Graduate 2010-01-16T21:32:49Z 2010-01-16T21:32:49Z 2006 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/18518 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description This dissertation addresses three issues in managing the fisheries commons: international sharing; international agreements; and property rights management. The overall purpose is to move towards providing consistent and broadly applicable analysis of fisheries management issues by conducting studies at an internationally comparable level. The first issue examined is whether fish stocks that are internationally shared are systematically more exploited than solely owned stocks. With the use of a newly compiled database that includes economic and biological characteristics along with the exploitation status of nearly two hundred fish stocks from around the globe, it is found that sharing is indeed a detrimental force in determining stock status. - The second issue is the natural next question of what effect international agreements have on shared fish stocks. Incorporating information on international cooperative and access agreements into the exploitation status database allows a first-pass analysis of the average effect of cooperative and access agreements on fish stocks. The final issue considered is the impact on productivity of the introduction of property rights management regimes. A parallel analysis of a traditional productivity approach and an index number decomposition to establish the source of productivity changes is conducted on a unique vessel-level dataset of the Norwegian coastal cod fishery and finds that the introduction of individual vessel quotas raised productivity. === Arts, Faculty of === Vancouver School of Economics === Graduate
author McWhinnie, Stephanie F.
spellingShingle McWhinnie, Stephanie F.
Management issues in the fisheries commons
author_facet McWhinnie, Stephanie F.
author_sort McWhinnie, Stephanie F.
title Management issues in the fisheries commons
title_short Management issues in the fisheries commons
title_full Management issues in the fisheries commons
title_fullStr Management issues in the fisheries commons
title_full_unstemmed Management issues in the fisheries commons
title_sort management issues in the fisheries commons
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/18518
work_keys_str_mv AT mcwhinniestephanief managementissuesinthefisheriescommons
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