Charting a New Course


Book Description

The Task Force has attempted to describe the Atlantic fishery, to set out its problems, and to recommend ways to break the cycle of overdependence, excessive pressure on a finite resource, and overcapacity in both harvesting and processing, which ultimately results in chronically low and unstable incomes. This volume provides the narrative summarizing the examination, analyses and findings and setting out recommendations. The technical basis of the work is set out in summary form in the annex, and background papers are to be published separately.







An Income Support System for Atlantic Fishermen


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Income Support for Atlantic Fishermen


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Discussion Paper


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Management of Marine Fisheries in Canada


Book Description

This report describes and evaluates the impact of the major changes in the management of Canada's marine fisheries in recent decades. The report covers the historical and jurisdictional context; biological and economic aspects; objectives of fisheries management; techniques of resources management in general and those used for specific species; managing the common property through allocation of access, limited entry licensing, and individual quotas; the international dimension; the social dimension; habitat management; fisheries enforcement; and fisheries management in the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Norway, Iceland, and the European Community.




Measures of Income Instability in the Fishery


Book Description

Study to analyze historical data from the 1980s and to address some of the fundamental issues regarding the stability of incomes in the Atlantic fishery. The study discusses the nature of income instability; reviews past studies of, and proposals for, income stabilization in the fishery; discusses the methodology used, including the use of longitudinal population files; analyses the income variability of the longitudinal population by sector and income class, and compares income variability in the fishery with that in other sectors of the economy, including the income profiles of self-employed fishermen and plantworkers; and provides some policy options to address income variability in the Atlantic fishery while making distinctions between options for self-employed fishermen and for fish processing employees.




Recent Developments in Fisheries Economics


Book Description

Articles cover a wide variety of recent topical issues in fisheries economics and the latest developments in the field, including marine protected areas, individual transferable quotas, fisheries subsidies, habitat values, data fouling, and rotational management of sedentary fishery resources. Seven of the articles were presented at the 2005 North American Association of Fisheries Economics Forum at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada.




Oceanic Abstracts


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