Search Results - "Parlee, Courtenay"
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1
Neo-liberal or not? Creeping enclosures and openings in the making of fisheries governance
Published in Maritime studies (2022)“…Neo-liberalism can mean different things from different perspectives. Social scientists tend to use the concept to identify and critique trends of…”
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2
Using conflict over risk management in the marine environment to strengthen measures of governance
Published in Ecology and society (01-12-2018)“…Management of and planning for the Canadian marine environment can be disrupted by conflict, but conflict is inevitable given the plurality of actors,…”
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An indicator framework to support comprehensive approaches to sustainable fisheries management
Published in Ecology and society (01-12-2019)“…Indicator-based frameworks for assessing the sustainability of commercial fisheries have become well-established in the consumer sector. Within fisheries…”
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Expanding the scope and roles of social sciences and humanities to support integrated ecosystem assessments and ecosystem-based management
Published in ICES journal of marine science (22-01-2024)“…Abstract Understanding social-ecological systems (SESs) is an important part of ecosystem-based management (EBM). One of the main decision support frameworks…”
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Institutional innovation in fisheries governance: adaptive co-management in situations of legal pluralism
Published in Current opinion in environmental sustainability (01-12-2014)“…•Institutional innovation is needed to address sustainability shortfalls in fisheries management.•Adaptive co-management may be the answer, but it must deal…”
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Whose audit is it? Harnessing the power of audit culture in conditions of legal pluralism
Published in Journal of legal pluralism and unofficial law (01-01-2015)“…This paper is a preliminary exploration of the relationship between audit culture and legal pluralism. Audits that employ a range of indicators are…”
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Who is Governing Food Systems? Power and Legal Pluralism in Lobster Traceability
Published in Journal of legal pluralism and unofficial law (01-01-2011)“…This paper uses a recent lobster traceability project in the Canadian Maritimes to examine the emerging governance institutions in our global food systems…”
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Enhancing fisheries education and research through the Canadian Fisheries Research Network: A student perspective on interdisciplinarity, collaboration and inclusivity
Published in Facets (Ottawa) (13-12-2018)“…Fisheries involve complex problems not easily addressed by a single discipline, methodology, or set of stakeholders. In 2010, the Canadian Fisheries Research…”
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Onshore benefits from fishing: Tracking value from the northern shrimp fishery to communities in Newfoundland and Labrador
Published in Marine policy (01-05-2019)“…Most fisheries assessments focus on biological and ecological conditions, fishery impacts and performance. Economic and social conditions and outcomes,…”
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Evaluating and implementing social–ecological systems: A comprehensive approach to sustainable fisheries
Published in Fish and fisheries (Oxford, England) (01-09-2018)“…Fisheries sustainability is recognized to have four pillars: ecological, economic, social (including cultural) and institutional (or governance). Although…”
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Full spectrum sustainability and a theory of access: Integrating social benefits into fisheries governance
Published in Marine policy (01-12-2021)“…The United Nations has identified access to and benefits from fisheries resources as key sustainable development challenges. The business-as-usual management…”
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Who is governing food systems? Power and legal pluralism in lobster traceability
Published in Journal of legal pluralism and unofficial law (01-01-2011)“…This paper uses a recent lobster traceability project in the Canadian Maritimes to examine the emerging governance institutions in our global food systems…”
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