Regional fishery management organizations and large marine ecosystems

Regional fisheries management organizations (RFMOs) addressing the management of living marine resources have a long history, beginning in 1811 with the North Pacific Fur Seal Convention followed by the International Pacific Halibut Convention in 1924. Following the expansion of fisheries after WWII...

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Main Author: Brown, Bradford E.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: The Maritime Commons: Digital Repository of the World Maritime University 2015
Subjects:
U.S
Online Access:https://commons.wmu.se/lib_articles/222
https://commons.wmu.se/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1221&context=lib_articles
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spelling ftworldmaritimeu:oai:commons.wmu.se:lib_articles-1221 2023-05-15T17:45:33+02:00 Regional fishery management organizations and large marine ecosystems Brown, Bradford E. 2015-07-18T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://commons.wmu.se/lib_articles/222 https://commons.wmu.se/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1221&context=lib_articles unknown The Maritime Commons: Digital Repository of the World Maritime University https://commons.wmu.se/lib_articles/222 https://commons.wmu.se/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1221&context=lib_articles Articles Large Marine Ecosystems (LMEs) Regional Fisheries Bodies (RFBs) Regional fisheries Management Organizations (RFMOs) Fisheries Africa U.S Aquaculture and Fisheries Environmental Sciences text 2015 ftworldmaritimeu 2023-01-22T08:28:24Z Regional fisheries management organizations (RFMOs) addressing the management of living marine resources have a long history, beginning in 1811 with the North Pacific Fur Seal Convention followed by the International Pacific Halibut Convention in 1924. Following the expansion of fisheries after WWII RFMOs proliferated and after the general acceptance of a 200 mile extended jurisdiction in the mid-1970s many more nations became involved. There are approximately 17 RFMOs, (depending on the definition of “management”) of the over 40 marine Regional Fisheries Bodies(RFBs) identified by FAO. The Large Marine Ecosystem (LME) approach has roots in the experience of the International Commission for the Conservation of Northwest Atlantic Fisheries (now defunct and replaced by the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization (NAFO)) which pioneered ecosystem based fisheries management. The LME approach was fleshed out in the 1980s and initiated as both the Global Environment Facility (GEF) and country projects, beginning in the mid-1990s. LMEs have fisheries as a major component to be addressed under the LME five-module concept. As LME Programs enter the stage where they need to move to develop their governance responsibilities, the relationship with existing RFMOs is critical. This paper examines possibilities for this interaction with special attention to, but not exclusively, the Western coast of Africa. Possible inferences from the US east coast experience are also addressed, considering the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission as a pseudo RFMO with the states assuming a role similar to countries. Text Northwest Atlantic World Maritime University (WMU): Maritime Commons Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection World Maritime University (WMU): Maritime Commons
op_collection_id ftworldmaritimeu
language unknown
topic Large Marine Ecosystems (LMEs)
Regional Fisheries Bodies (RFBs)
Regional fisheries Management Organizations (RFMOs)
Fisheries
Africa
U.S
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle Large Marine Ecosystems (LMEs)
Regional Fisheries Bodies (RFBs)
Regional fisheries Management Organizations (RFMOs)
Fisheries
Africa
U.S
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Environmental Sciences
Brown, Bradford E.
Regional fishery management organizations and large marine ecosystems
topic_facet Large Marine Ecosystems (LMEs)
Regional Fisheries Bodies (RFBs)
Regional fisheries Management Organizations (RFMOs)
Fisheries
Africa
U.S
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Environmental Sciences
description Regional fisheries management organizations (RFMOs) addressing the management of living marine resources have a long history, beginning in 1811 with the North Pacific Fur Seal Convention followed by the International Pacific Halibut Convention in 1924. Following the expansion of fisheries after WWII RFMOs proliferated and after the general acceptance of a 200 mile extended jurisdiction in the mid-1970s many more nations became involved. There are approximately 17 RFMOs, (depending on the definition of “management”) of the over 40 marine Regional Fisheries Bodies(RFBs) identified by FAO. The Large Marine Ecosystem (LME) approach has roots in the experience of the International Commission for the Conservation of Northwest Atlantic Fisheries (now defunct and replaced by the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization (NAFO)) which pioneered ecosystem based fisheries management. The LME approach was fleshed out in the 1980s and initiated as both the Global Environment Facility (GEF) and country projects, beginning in the mid-1990s. LMEs have fisheries as a major component to be addressed under the LME five-module concept. As LME Programs enter the stage where they need to move to develop their governance responsibilities, the relationship with existing RFMOs is critical. This paper examines possibilities for this interaction with special attention to, but not exclusively, the Western coast of Africa. Possible inferences from the US east coast experience are also addressed, considering the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission as a pseudo RFMO with the states assuming a role similar to countries.
format Text
author Brown, Bradford E.
author_facet Brown, Bradford E.
author_sort Brown, Bradford E.
title Regional fishery management organizations and large marine ecosystems
title_short Regional fishery management organizations and large marine ecosystems
title_full Regional fishery management organizations and large marine ecosystems
title_fullStr Regional fishery management organizations and large marine ecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Regional fishery management organizations and large marine ecosystems
title_sort regional fishery management organizations and large marine ecosystems
publisher The Maritime Commons: Digital Repository of the World Maritime University
publishDate 2015
url https://commons.wmu.se/lib_articles/222
https://commons.wmu.se/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1221&context=lib_articles
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Northwest Atlantic
genre_facet Northwest Atlantic
op_source Articles
op_relation https://commons.wmu.se/lib_articles/222
https://commons.wmu.se/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1221&context=lib_articles
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