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Comparative Evaluations of Innovative Fisheries Management [electronic resource] :Global Experiences and European Prospects / edited by Kjellrun Hiis Hauge, Douglas Clyde Wilson.

by Hauge, Kjellrun Hiis [editor.]; Wilson, Douglas Clyde [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2009.Description: online resource.ISBN: 9789048126637.Subject(s): Environmental sciences | Wildlife management | Public law | Environmental management | Sustainable development | Environmental economics | Social sciences | Environment | Sustainable Development | Fish & Wildlife Biology & Management | Environmental Economics | Social Sciences, general | Environmental Management | European Law/Public International LawDDC classification: 338.927 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction: The CEVIS Idea -- The New Zealand’s Quota Management System (QMS) and its Complementary Mechanisms -- Rights-Based Management and Participatory Governance in Southwest Nova Scotia -- Abundant Fish Stocks and Profitable Fisheries off Alaska – A Study on Harvest Control Rules and Pollock Cooperatives -- The Icelandic ITQ System -- Evaluating Biological Robustness of Innovative Management Alternatives -- Evaluating Economic Efficiency of Innovative Management Regimes -- Understanding Social Robustness in Selected European Fisheries Management Systems -- Costs of Management in Selected Fisheries -- Legal Aspects of Individual Transferable Quotas -- How to Compare (the Efficiency of) Fisheries Management Systems? -- Conclusion: The Innovation Evaluation Framework.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The Comparative Evaluations of Innovative Solutions in European Fisheries Management (CEVIS) Project (2006 - 2009) was an exploration of how science can aid policy decisions. CEVIS teamed up biologists, economists, and other social scientists to evaluate four fisheries management innovations being considered for Europe: participatory approaches; rights-based regimes; effort control; and decision-rule systems. Comparative Evaluations of Innovative Fisheries Management brings the CEVIS project full circle by providing further insights into the role of science in policy. The volume begins with a look at four places outside the European Union known for innovative management: New Zealand, Nova Scotia, Alaska and Iceland. Then the focus shifts to the success criteria related to specific disciplines including biological and social robustness, economic efficiency and impacts on management costs. Hypotheses are tested using data capable of generating useful results. The main conclusions include a retrospective of how key concepts defined and represented the various perspectives, skills and backgrounds that made up the multidisciplinary CEVIS project.
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Introduction: The CEVIS Idea -- The New Zealand’s Quota Management System (QMS) and its Complementary Mechanisms -- Rights-Based Management and Participatory Governance in Southwest Nova Scotia -- Abundant Fish Stocks and Profitable Fisheries off Alaska – A Study on Harvest Control Rules and Pollock Cooperatives -- The Icelandic ITQ System -- Evaluating Biological Robustness of Innovative Management Alternatives -- Evaluating Economic Efficiency of Innovative Management Regimes -- Understanding Social Robustness in Selected European Fisheries Management Systems -- Costs of Management in Selected Fisheries -- Legal Aspects of Individual Transferable Quotas -- How to Compare (the Efficiency of) Fisheries Management Systems? -- Conclusion: The Innovation Evaluation Framework.

The Comparative Evaluations of Innovative Solutions in European Fisheries Management (CEVIS) Project (2006 - 2009) was an exploration of how science can aid policy decisions. CEVIS teamed up biologists, economists, and other social scientists to evaluate four fisheries management innovations being considered for Europe: participatory approaches; rights-based regimes; effort control; and decision-rule systems. Comparative Evaluations of Innovative Fisheries Management brings the CEVIS project full circle by providing further insights into the role of science in policy. The volume begins with a look at four places outside the European Union known for innovative management: New Zealand, Nova Scotia, Alaska and Iceland. Then the focus shifts to the success criteria related to specific disciplines including biological and social robustness, economic efficiency and impacts on management costs. Hypotheses are tested using data capable of generating useful results. The main conclusions include a retrospective of how key concepts defined and represented the various perspectives, skills and backgrounds that made up the multidisciplinary CEVIS project.

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