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Fisheries Management

Towards a better understanding of conflict management in tropical fisheries: evidence from Ghana, Bangladesh and the Caribbean


Posted on: 13 Dec, 2017 8:41 am

This paper explores the nature of conflict and how institutional failure may be a primary cause of conflict over natural resources. Typologies for studying conflicts are reviewed and a typology specific to tropical fishery conflicts is proposed. Using data from three tropical fisheries, it shows how conflicts emerge and how they are managed. The paper concludes that local level management of conflict can be successful, but, without proactive support from higher levels of government the underlying causes of conflict are unlikely to be removed in the long term.

Read full paper https://doi.org/10.1016/S0308-597X(01)00022-7

Name of Author(s):
Elizabeth Bennett, Arthur Neiland, Emilia Anang, Paul Bannerman, A. Atiq Rahman, Saleemul Huq, Shajahan Bhuiya, Mark Day, Michelle Fulford-Gardiner, Wesley Clerveaux
Institutional Affiliation:

Department of Economics, CEMARE, Conflict in Tropical Fisheries, University of Portsmouth, Locksway Road, Portsmouth, PO4 8JF, UK

Marine Fisheries Research Division (MFRD), Ministry of Food and Agriculture, Ghana

Bangladesh Centre for AdvancedStudies (BCAS), Dhaka, Bangladesh

Department for Environment andCoastal Resources (DECR), Turks and Caicos Islands

Type of Publication:
Journal Article
Name of Publisher or Journal:
Marine Policy
Date of Publication:
2001
Number of Pages:
11