Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: Fishing livelihoods and fisheries management in Northwest Iceland

This dissertation research employs an ethnographic method to analyze motivations for individuals? participation in small-scale fisheries. The majority of fisheries in Iceland are managed under a nationwide privatized program where access to the right to fish is limited, and these limitations can neg...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Courtney Carothers
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:335ceba7-46b2-4ab1-a9c8-b8ecfeb9530b
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spelling dataone:urn:uuid:335ceba7-46b2-4ab1-a9c8-b8ecfeb9530b 2024-06-03T18:46:49+00:00 Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: Fishing livelihoods and fisheries management in Northwest Iceland Courtney Carothers ENVELOPE(-24.0,-13.0,68.0,62.0) BEGINDATE: 2013-08-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2014-12-31T00:00:00Z 2015-05-06T10:20:47Z https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:335ceba7-46b2-4ab1-a9c8-b8ecfeb9530b unknown Arctic Data Center ASSP Dataset 2015 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC 2024-06-03T18:07:25Z This dissertation research employs an ethnographic method to analyze motivations for individuals? participation in small-scale fisheries. The majority of fisheries in Iceland are managed under a nationwide privatized program where access to the right to fish is limited, and these limitations can negatively impact small-scale fishing operations. This project aims to better understand the opportunities and constraints that varying management schemes have on the cultural dimensions of small-scale fisheries. The economic literature that fisheries privatization is based upon assumes the primary motivation for fishing to be profit maximization. However, research from around the world suggests that a wide range of motivations for engagement in fisheries exists outside profit generation. This research compares individuals engaged in non-privatized small-boat fisheries with those participating in the small-boat privatized fisheries in a two-phase design that uses methods of semi-directed interviewing and the deployment of a questionnaire to gather qualitative and quantitative data. Results will add to new knowledge exploring the effects that the privatization of marine resources has on individuals? abilities to access marine resources. This research will also bring a new perspective to fisheries management in Iceland and abroad by providing a better understanding of the variations of motivations in fisheries and exploring the ways political and social institutions affect how humans organize around resources. Dataset Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: Fishing livelihoods and fisheries management in Northwest Iceland Iceland Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) ENVELOPE(-24.0,-13.0,68.0,62.0)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
topic ASSP
spellingShingle ASSP
Courtney Carothers
Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: Fishing livelihoods and fisheries management in Northwest Iceland
topic_facet ASSP
description This dissertation research employs an ethnographic method to analyze motivations for individuals? participation in small-scale fisheries. The majority of fisheries in Iceland are managed under a nationwide privatized program where access to the right to fish is limited, and these limitations can negatively impact small-scale fishing operations. This project aims to better understand the opportunities and constraints that varying management schemes have on the cultural dimensions of small-scale fisheries. The economic literature that fisheries privatization is based upon assumes the primary motivation for fishing to be profit maximization. However, research from around the world suggests that a wide range of motivations for engagement in fisheries exists outside profit generation. This research compares individuals engaged in non-privatized small-boat fisheries with those participating in the small-boat privatized fisheries in a two-phase design that uses methods of semi-directed interviewing and the deployment of a questionnaire to gather qualitative and quantitative data. Results will add to new knowledge exploring the effects that the privatization of marine resources has on individuals? abilities to access marine resources. This research will also bring a new perspective to fisheries management in Iceland and abroad by providing a better understanding of the variations of motivations in fisheries and exploring the ways political and social institutions affect how humans organize around resources.
format Dataset
author Courtney Carothers
author_facet Courtney Carothers
author_sort Courtney Carothers
title Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: Fishing livelihoods and fisheries management in Northwest Iceland
title_short Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: Fishing livelihoods and fisheries management in Northwest Iceland
title_full Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: Fishing livelihoods and fisheries management in Northwest Iceland
title_fullStr Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: Fishing livelihoods and fisheries management in Northwest Iceland
title_full_unstemmed Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: Fishing livelihoods and fisheries management in Northwest Iceland
title_sort doctoral dissertation improvement grant: fishing livelihoods and fisheries management in northwest iceland
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2015
url https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:335ceba7-46b2-4ab1-a9c8-b8ecfeb9530b
op_coverage ENVELOPE(-24.0,-13.0,68.0,62.0)
BEGINDATE: 2013-08-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2014-12-31T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-24.0,-13.0,68.0,62.0)
genre Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: Fishing livelihoods and fisheries management in Northwest Iceland
Iceland
genre_facet Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: Fishing livelihoods and fisheries management in Northwest Iceland
Iceland
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