University of Wollongong
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Resource allocation in transboundary tuna fisheries: A global analysis

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 12:55 authored by Katherine Seto, Grantly R Galland, Alice McDonald, Angela Abolhassani, Kamal Azmi, Hussain Sinan, Trent Timmiss, Megan Bailey, Quentin Hanich
Resource allocation is a fundamental and challenging component of common pool resource governance, particularly transboundary fisheries. We highlight the growing importance of allocation in fisheries governance, comparing approaches of the five tuna Regional Fisheries Management Organizations (tRFMOs). We find all tRFMOs except one have defined resources for allocation and outlined principles to guide allocation based on equity, citizenship, and legitimacy. However, all fall short of applying these principles in assigning fish resources. Most tRFMOs rely on historical catch or effort, while equity principles rarely determine dedicated rights. Further, the current system of annual negotiations reduces certainty, trust, and transparency, counteracting many benefits asserted by rights-based management proponents. We suggest one means of gaining traction may be to shift conversations from allocative rights toward weighting of principles already identified by most tRFMOs. Incorporating principles into resource allocation remains a major opportunity, with important implications for current and future access to fish.

History

Journal title

Ambio

Volume

50

Issue

1

Pagination

242-259

Language

English

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