90,979 research outputs found

    Principles for Managing Fisheries to Facilitate Adaptation to Uncertain Effects of Climate Change

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    In International Institute of Fisheries Economics and Trade (IIFET) 2008 Meeting, Nha Trang, Vietna

    Property Rights and Use Rights in Fisheries

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    This report was presented at the 8th Conference of the International Institute for Fisheries Economics and Trade in 1998 and provides the framework for understanding and further investigations of property rights and use rights in fisheries

    Unraveling the Multiple Margins of Rent Generation from Individual Transferable Quotas

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    "Unraveling the Multiple Margins of Rent Generation from Individual Transferable Quotas." International Institute of Fisheries Economics and Trade's 16th Biennial Conference, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, July 16-20, 201

    Global recognition for CMFRI Scientist The Hindu Business Line dated 4th April 2018

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    Shyam S Salim, Principal Scientist at the Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute (CMFRI), has been elected as a regular executive member of the International Institute of Fisheries Economics and Trade (IIFET) based in Oregon State University, USA. IIFET, which is a global organisation consisting of more than 700 members from over 65 countries around the world, provides an international forum for the exchange of research, information, and ideas on the economics of fisheries management, seafood trade, and aquaculture

    The Big Picture: A Fishery System Approach Links Fishery Management and Biodiversity

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    This article was published in the Proceedings of the sixth conference of the International Institute of Fisheries Economics and Trade. Successful fishery development can be defined as the simultaneous achievement of ecological, socioeconomic, community and institutional sustainability. This paper incorporates these sustainability elements within an integrated framework, which is applied in a case of Puerto Thiel, a fishing community in the Gulf of Nicoya on Costa Rica's Pacific Coast. The economic performance of the local fishing cooperative is analysed, and experiences with economic diversification are reviewed. We highlight the importance, especially in heavily exploited fisheries, of policies that simultaneously pursue development (to increase local socioeconomic and community fishery benefits within resource limitations) and economic diversification (to lessen the impact of fishery management restrictions by creating non-fishery employment alternatives)
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