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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12348/4205

    Collateral damage? Small-scale fisheries in the global fight against IUU fishing

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    Abstract
    • Concern over illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing has led to a number of policy, trade and surveillance measures. While much attention has been given to the impact of IUU regulation on industrial fleets, recognition of the distinct impacts on small-scale fisheries is conspicuously lacking from the policy and research debate. In this paper, we outline three ways in which the application of IUU discourse and regulation undermines small-scale fisheries. First, the mainstream construction of “illegal,” “unreported” and “unregulated” fishing, and also the categorical use of “IUU” in an all-inclusive sense, disregards the diversity, legitimacy and sustainability of small-scale fisheries practices and their governing systems. Second, we explore how the recent trade-related measures to counter IUU fishing mask and reinforce existing inequalities between different sectors and countries, creating an unfair burden on small-scale fisheries and countries who depend on them. Third, as IUU fishing is increasingly approached as “organized crime,” there is a risk of inappropriately targeting small-scale fisheries, at times violently. Reflecting on these three trends, we propose three strategies by which a more sensitive and ultimately more equitable incorporation of small-scale fisheries can be supported in the global fight against IUU fishing.
    • External link to download this item: https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/faf.12462
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    • Resilient small-scale fisheries [1074]
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    • Song_et_al_2020.pdf (996.5Kb)
    Date
    • 2020
    Author
    • Song, A.
    • Scholtens, J.
    • Barclay, K.
    • Bush, S.R.
    • Fabinyi, M.
    • Adhuri, D.S.
    • Haughton, M.
    Subject(s)
    • inclusive governance; certificatioin
    AGROVOC Keywords
    • governance; policies; trade; developing countries; regulations; small-scale fisheries; fishery management; seafoods
    Type
    • Journal Article
    Publisher
    • Wiley
    Metadata
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