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Property Rights: Design Lessons from Fisheries and Other Natual Resources

A series of multidisciplinary sessions organized by Susan Hanna, of Oregon State University, will focus on property rights and how they work to influence individual and group behavior. Economists, anthropologists, political scientists and sociologists will present design lessons from property rights systems in fisheries and other natural resources.

Parts 1-6

System Complexities

Wednesday, July 12; Block A: 9:00-10:30am

Susan Hanna, Oregon State University, USA
Expanding the Scope of Property Rights in American Fisheries
Steve Edwards, NMFS Northeast Fisheries Science Center, USA
An Elemental Basis of Property Rights to Marine Fishery Resources  
Anthony T. Charles, Management Science / Environmental Studies, Saint Mary's University, Canada
Use Rights: Overview and Multi-Objective Analysis  
James A. Wilson, University of Maine, USA
Conservation Incentives in a Complex Fishery

In the Wake of IFQs

Wednesday July 12; Block B: 11:00am-12:30pm

Christopher M. Dewees, University of California - Davis, USA
New Zealand's Quota Management System: Changes in the Auckland Fishing Community Through the First 14 Years
Sevaly Sen
Property Rights in ITQ Fisheries: Fact or Fiction?  
Thorolfur Matthiasson, University of Iceland
Changing the Rules for Regulation of Icelandic Fisheries  
Gunnar Knapp, Institute of Social and Economic Research, University of Alaska Anchorage, USA
Attitudes of Alaska Halibut Fishermen Toward IFQ Management

Building Flexibility into Property Rights Systems

Wednesday July 12; Block C: 2:00-3:30pm

James D. Hastie, NMFS Northwest Fisheries Science Center, USA
Permit Stacking as an Aproach to Implementing Harvest Rights that Can be Transferred and Accumulated  
Mariam McCall, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, Dept. of Commerce, USA
Property Rights in Atlantic HMS Management
James Sanchirico, Quality of Environment Division, Resources for the Future, USA
Individual Transferable Quotas and Bycatch Management: Preliminary Evidence from the New Zealand Experience

The Social Context of Fisheries Management

Wednesday July 12; Block D: 4:00-5:30

Torbjorn Trondsen, Norwegian College of Fishery Science, University of Tromso, Norway
Market Oriented Value Adding (MOVA) and Fisheries Management  
Michael Healey, Institute for Resources and Environment, University of British Columbia, Canada
Paradox of Fairness: The Impact of Escalating Complexity on Fishery Management  
Parzival Copes, Institute of Fisheries Analysis, Simon Fraser University, British Columbia, Canada
Challenging ITQs: Legal And Political Action In Iceland, Canada, And Latin America  
Robin Alden, formerly Maine Comm. of Marine Resources, USA
Apprenticeship and Conservation Incentives  

Co-management/Self Management

Thursday July 13; Block A: 9:00-10:30am

Olivier Thebaud, IFREMER, Service d'Economie Maritime, France
The Economics of Fisheries Self-regulation: Analytical Issues and a Historical Case Study  
Janne Hukkinen, Laboratory of Environmental Protection, Helsinki University of Technology, Finland
Scenarios as Radical Alternatives: The Case of Aquaculture in the Finnish Archipelago Sea  
Pekka Salmi, Finnish Game and Fisheries Research Institute, Saimaa Fisheries Research, Finland
Private Water Ownership and Fisheries Governance in Finland  
Kuperan Viswanathan, ICLARM, Malaysia
Welfare Impacts of Fisheries Co-Management System at Oxbow Lakes in Bangladesh  

States and Other Interests

Thursday July 13; Block B: 11:00am-12:30pm

R. Quentin Grafton, University of Ottawa, Canada
Property Rights for Fisheries
Sara Singleton, University of Washington, USA
Cooperation or Capture? The Paradox of Comanagement and Community Participation in Natural Resrouce Management and Environmental Policymaking  
Tadashi Yamamoto, Japan International Fishery Research Society
Why Fishery Community based Fishery Management (FCFM) has been well Developed In Japan - Legal Framework is indispensable for the Development of FCFM    
Eric J. Ziegelmayer, University at Albany, Department of Political Science, USA
Ocean Limits: Commoditization and the Crisis of the Fishery

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