Displacement, diffusion and intensification (DDI) in marine fisheries: A typology for analyzing coalitional stability under dynamic conditions

Achieving sustainable fisheries management often entails overcoming a range of substantial hurdles, particularly in the case of shared, straddling and highly migratory fish stocks. Gaps exist in ecological understanding of fish stocks, the number of fishing nations and their respective management pr...

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Main Authors: Blasiak, Robert, Doll, Christopher, Yagi, Nobuyuki, Kurokura, Hisashi
Language:unknown
Published: Elsevier 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://collections.unu.edu/view/UNU:3158
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spelling ftunitednatuni:oai:collections.unu.edu:UNU:3158 2023-05-15T13:09:25+02:00 Displacement, diffusion and intensification (DDI) in marine fisheries: A typology for analyzing coalitional stability under dynamic conditions Blasiak, Robert Doll, Christopher Yagi, Nobuyuki Kurokura, Hisashi 2015-12-01 http://collections.unu.edu/view/UNU:3158 unknown Elsevier http://collections.unu.edu/view/UNU:3158 Sustainable fisheries management Displacement Diffusion Intensification Balloon effects Marine capture fisheries Cooperation 2015 ftunitednatuni 2022-01-07T13:08:20Z Achieving sustainable fisheries management often entails overcoming a range of substantial hurdles, particularly in the case of shared, straddling and highly migratory fish stocks. Gaps exist in ecological understanding of fish stocks, the number of fishing nations and their respective management practices are seldom static, and a range of natural and anthropogenic pressures can cause dramatic shifts in distribution and abundance of fish. Even for cases in which coalitions of fishing nations with coordinated management mechanisms exist, such pressures can introduce instability into the system. This paper describes the distinctions that can be drawn among the destabilizing effects caused by the reactive spatial displacement, diffusion or intensification (DDI) of fishing activities. A general typology of these effects is introduced based on phenomena observed in other policy areas and illustrated with specific examples from the Atlantic Mackerel, Alaska Pollock and Skipjack Tuna fisheries. These examples illustrate the contrast between fishing entities, which are flexible in swiftly reacting to changes in fisheries, while the institutional frameworks that exist to ensure sustainable management of fishery resources are remarkably slow. The multi-year lag time between the response of fishing entities and institutions is suggested as the main source of instability resulting from DDI effects. While this typology has not been previously applied to marine fisheries, the effects presented can be generalized to other policy areas to allow for a greater understanding of spatial effects along with their causes and consequences for the effectiveness of cooperation among partners and sustainable resource management. Other/Unknown Material alaska pollock Alaska United Nations University Tokyo: UNU Collections
institution Open Polar
collection United Nations University Tokyo: UNU Collections
op_collection_id ftunitednatuni
language unknown
topic Sustainable fisheries management
Displacement
Diffusion
Intensification
Balloon effects
Marine capture fisheries
Cooperation
spellingShingle Sustainable fisheries management
Displacement
Diffusion
Intensification
Balloon effects
Marine capture fisheries
Cooperation
Blasiak, Robert
Doll, Christopher
Yagi, Nobuyuki
Kurokura, Hisashi
Displacement, diffusion and intensification (DDI) in marine fisheries: A typology for analyzing coalitional stability under dynamic conditions
topic_facet Sustainable fisheries management
Displacement
Diffusion
Intensification
Balloon effects
Marine capture fisheries
Cooperation
description Achieving sustainable fisheries management often entails overcoming a range of substantial hurdles, particularly in the case of shared, straddling and highly migratory fish stocks. Gaps exist in ecological understanding of fish stocks, the number of fishing nations and their respective management practices are seldom static, and a range of natural and anthropogenic pressures can cause dramatic shifts in distribution and abundance of fish. Even for cases in which coalitions of fishing nations with coordinated management mechanisms exist, such pressures can introduce instability into the system. This paper describes the distinctions that can be drawn among the destabilizing effects caused by the reactive spatial displacement, diffusion or intensification (DDI) of fishing activities. A general typology of these effects is introduced based on phenomena observed in other policy areas and illustrated with specific examples from the Atlantic Mackerel, Alaska Pollock and Skipjack Tuna fisheries. These examples illustrate the contrast between fishing entities, which are flexible in swiftly reacting to changes in fisheries, while the institutional frameworks that exist to ensure sustainable management of fishery resources are remarkably slow. The multi-year lag time between the response of fishing entities and institutions is suggested as the main source of instability resulting from DDI effects. While this typology has not been previously applied to marine fisheries, the effects presented can be generalized to other policy areas to allow for a greater understanding of spatial effects along with their causes and consequences for the effectiveness of cooperation among partners and sustainable resource management.
author Blasiak, Robert
Doll, Christopher
Yagi, Nobuyuki
Kurokura, Hisashi
author_facet Blasiak, Robert
Doll, Christopher
Yagi, Nobuyuki
Kurokura, Hisashi
author_sort Blasiak, Robert
title Displacement, diffusion and intensification (DDI) in marine fisheries: A typology for analyzing coalitional stability under dynamic conditions
title_short Displacement, diffusion and intensification (DDI) in marine fisheries: A typology for analyzing coalitional stability under dynamic conditions
title_full Displacement, diffusion and intensification (DDI) in marine fisheries: A typology for analyzing coalitional stability under dynamic conditions
title_fullStr Displacement, diffusion and intensification (DDI) in marine fisheries: A typology for analyzing coalitional stability under dynamic conditions
title_full_unstemmed Displacement, diffusion and intensification (DDI) in marine fisheries: A typology for analyzing coalitional stability under dynamic conditions
title_sort displacement, diffusion and intensification (ddi) in marine fisheries: a typology for analyzing coalitional stability under dynamic conditions
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2015
url http://collections.unu.edu/view/UNU:3158
genre alaska pollock
Alaska
genre_facet alaska pollock
Alaska
op_relation http://collections.unu.edu/view/UNU:3158
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