The shift away from the management of individual resources to the broader perspective of ecosystems is no longer confined to academia and think tanks where it first began; the ecosystem paradigm also is beginning to take root in government policy and programs. This volume provides innovative and timely approaches for improving and sustaining socioeconomic benefits from LMEs. The authors describe methodologies and actions for moving forward in halting the downward resource sustainability spiral and advancing toward the recovery of depleted fish stocks, restoration of degraded habitats, and reduction and control of pollution within the framework of an ecosystem-based approach for the governance of LMEs.
* First book to ever publish that focuses on the human dimension of large marine ecosystem management * Offers set of guidelines for possible interrelationship management programs * Addresses taxing issues and problems pertaining to the world's marine ecosystems * Provides a matrix of the interdependence of economic, social, cultural and governance elementsPart I. Large Marine Ecosystems, Social Theory and LME Management Methodology
1.The Large Maine Ecosystems Approach for Assessment and Management of Ocean Coastal Waters 2.The Human Dimension in Ecosystem Management: Institutional Performance and The Sea Grant Paradigm 3.A Framework for Monitoring and Assessing Socioeconomics and Governance of Large Marine Ecosystems 4.Governance Profiles and the Management of Large Marine Ecosystems 5.A Total Capital Approach to the Management of Large Marine Ecosystems: Case Studies of Two Natural Resource Disasters 6.Ownership of Multi-Attribute Fishery Resources in Large Marine Ecosystems
Part II. Economic Activity and the Cost of Ownership
7.Economic Activity Associated with the Northeast Shelf Large Marine Ecosystems: l3Œ