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Sustainable Fisheries in the Mediterranean Note: This publication may be partially or completely reproduced for educational and non-profit purposes without express consent of the Regional Activity Centre for Cleaner Production (CP/RAC), always citing the source of the information. CP/RAC would appreciate receiving a copy of any publication where this material was used as a source. It is prohibited to use this information for commercial purposes or for sale without written consent from CP/RAC. The denominations used in this publication and the presentation of material in the same do not imply the expression of any opinion by CAR/PL relating to legal status of a country, territory or area, or its authorities or respecting its borders and limits. If there is any study point which can be improved or if there is any inaccuracy, please let us know. The CP/RAC, based in Barcelona-Spain, was established in 1996. Its mission is to promote mechanisms leading to sustainable consumption and production patterns and sound chemicals management in Mediterranean countries. The CP/RAC activities are financed by the Spanish Government once they have been submitted and approved by the Contracting Parties to the Barcelona Convention and by the Bilateral Monitoring Commission made up of representatives from the Spanish and Catalan Governments. ; N/A
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In: Africa research bulletin. Economic, financial and technical series, Band 45, Heft 12
ISSN: 1467-6346
In: European access: the current awareness bulletin to the policies and activities of the European Communities, Heft 3, S. 85
ISSN: 0264-7362, 1362-458X
In: Working towards Sustainable Development: Opportunities for decent work and social inclusion in a green economy, S. 61-74
In: The Economics of Rebuilding Fisheries, S. 31-43
In: Future Fisheries Management Issue Brief Series
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In: OECD Review of Fisheries
- Foreword and Acknowledgements - Acronyms and abbreviations - Executive summary - Production trends in fisheries and aquaculture - Policy developments in fisheries and aquaculture - The FSE database and indicators of policy support to fisheries - OECD and non-OECD economy snapshots - Argentina - Australia - Belgium - Canada - Chile - People's Republic of China - Colombia - Czech Republic - Denmark - Estonia - European Union - France - Germany - Greece - Iceland - Indonesia - Ireland - Italy - Japan - Korea - Latvia - Lithuania - Mexico - Netherlands - New Zealand - Norway - Poland - Portugal - Slovak Republic - Slovenia - Spain - Sweden - Chinese Taipei - Thailand - Turkey - United States.
In: Chapman & Hall Fish and Fisheries Series 20
Reef ecosystems extend throughout the tropics. Exploited by small-scale fishers, reefs supply food for millions of people, but, worldwide, there are growing worries about the productivity and current state of these ecosystems. Reef fish stocks display many features of fisheries elsewhere. However, habitat spatial complexity, biological diversity within and among species, ecosystem intricacy and variable means of exploitation make it hard to predict sustainable modes and levels of fishing
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, S. 59-65
ISSN: 0002-7162
Although natural resource exploitation has a long tradition, modern resource management is a more recent phenomenon. The huge variety in natural resource exploitation has made it difficult to place the industrial harvesting of marine living resources under political and managerial control. For most of history fish and fishing people have for all practical purposes been unmanageable. From the late 1960s, when it became apparent that important fisheries resources were about to be overexploited by industrial technologies, the process to transform fish, fishing people and fishing technologies to make them manageable has intensified. The management process contributes to an organizational change in the fisheries in which cybernetic forms of organization create complex and heterogeneous networks linking together nature, society, technology, science, markets, and policy in new ways. With Actor-Network Theory (ant) and the history of industrial commercial fisheries in Norway, Canada and worldwide as points of departure, this article outlines a theoretical framework for the study of how natural and social entities are transformed and linked together to become modern fisheries resource management.
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