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Journal article

Stakeholder perceptions in fisheries management - Sectors with benthic impacts

In Marine Policy 2018, Volume 92, pp. 73-85
From

Wageningen University & Research1

National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark2

Section for Ecosystem based Marine Management, National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark3

Hellenic Centre for Marine Research4

Research Institute for Agriculture and Fisheries5

Central Fisheries Research Institute6

National Research Council of Italy7

Ondokuz Mayis University8

The capture fishing sector causes direct and indirect impacts on benthic habitats and associated fauna and flora. Effectiveness of new mitigation measures depends on fishermen's perceptions; their acceptance of, and compliance to, those measures. Accordingly, by means of Advisory Councils (ACs), fisheries stakeholders are encouraged by the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) reform to contribute to policy formulations.

Still, the CFP reform remains unclear about how to possibly incorporate perceptions of specific conservation measures and objectives in practice. Against this background, this article aims at exploring a systematic multi-criteria approach that provides information about stakeholder preferences for objectives reflecting on what is more important to aim for (‘what’), mitigation measures as strategies for reaching their objectives (‘how’), and accountability options that can enhance trust in the people who carry out management (‘who').

The approach applies a pairwise comparison approach to elucidate the stakeholder preferences, and to estimate the relative importance of the different options. It is conducted in the Black Sea, the Mediterranean Sea, the Baltic Sea, and the North Sea. The outcomes of the questionnaire survey succeed in transparently reflecting a diversity of preferences.

It is advised that in order to inform the CFP, the ACs develop a user-friendly attractive online version of this approach that can reach multiple stakeholders across Europe and facilitate updates on a continuous basis. In this way the ACs could better facilitate bottom-up participation in fisheries management by representing a wide range of stakeholder perceptions.

Language: English
Year: 2018
Pages: 73-85
ISSN: 18729460 and 0308597x
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpol.2018.02.019
ORCIDs: Nielsen, J. R. and Eigaard, O. R.

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