Synopses & Reviews
This book offers an environmental-economic analysis of exploited ecosystems with a clear policy orientation. The study moves beyond traditional economic fishery analysis in two respects. First, several theoretical and numerical models are offered that combine economic and ecological descriptions of fisheries. Second, valuation and stakeholder concerns are addressed in empirical analyses employing both qualitative and quantitative approaches. The approaches, models and policy insights are sufficiently general and innovative to interest a broad audience.
Synopsis
Economic dimensions have been somewhat neglected in research on nature policy and management of marine ecosystem exploitation. The current book aims to ?ll this gap. It examines the mismatches of natural, socio-economic, and regulatory processes and regimes in time and space. This involves dealing with the complexity and uncertainty that are inherent to the interaction of marine ecosystems and economic systems. The approach adopted is based on the idea that the design of sustainability policies requires an integration of insights from resource, environmental, and ecological economics on theonehandandmarinebiologyandenvironmentalsciencesontheotherhand.Forthis purpose, use is made of integrated assessment on the basis of theoretical and applied mathematical models. The book is the result of a large project, hosted by the Department of Spatial E- nomics of the Free University in Amsterdam, under the supervision of the ?rst author. TheprojectreceivedfundingfromtheNetherlandsOrganisationforScienti?cResearch (NWO), through a priority program titled SustainableUseandConservationof- rine Living Resources, which was initiated and coordinated by Prof. Wim Wolff of the University of Groningen. The work reported here has greatly bene?ted from external advice given by marine biologists who participated in this research program."
Table of Contents
1. Background and summary. Part I: Tools and Basic Insights. 2. Integrated assessment of marine ecosystem exploitation. 3. Deterministic economic models of fisheries management and policy. 4. Incorporating uncertainty in the economic analysis of marine ecosystem exploitation. 5. Managing the fisheries: A synthesis of old and new insights. Part II: Bioeconomic Modelling. 6. Harvesting and conservation in a predator-prey-system. 7. Bioeconomic analysis of a shellfishery with habitat effects. 8. Marine reserve creation for sedentary species with uncertain metapopulation dynamics. 9. A spatial-temporal model of the interaction of shellfish and birds in a marine ecosystem. Part III: Monetary Valuation and Stakeholder Analysis. 10. Policy failure and stakeholder dissatisfaction in the Dutch Wadden Sea shellfishery. 11. Stated choice valuation of multiple stakeholders in the Dutch Wadden Sea. 12. The cost of exotic marine species: a joint travel cost - contingent valuation survey. References. Index.