The Social Aspects of Fishing Effort: Technology and Community in Norway’s Blue Whiting Fisheries
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Accepted version
Permanent lenke
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2633511Utgivelsesdato
2007-01-06Metadata
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Originalversjon
Human Ecology (New York, N.Y.). 2007, 35 (5), 587-599.Sammendrag
While economic literature inspired by the “tragedy of the commons” has emphasised people’s tendency to increase fishing effort beyond desirable levels, sociologists and anthropologists who have studied the social aspects of fishing have often emphasised the capacity of these factors to restrict fishing effort. The article addresses the influence of social norms and communication on fishing effort in an empirical study of the Atlantic blue whiting fishery. The data were generated at a time when this fishery had yet to see efficient quota regulations, and had been subject to a rapid growth in fishing effort, making it the largest fishery in the Atlantic. The article argues that social norms and communication patterns in the fishing fleet create a synergic effect of co-operation and competition on fishing effort. The article questions the view that social norms and communication necessarily represent a solution to the tragedy of the commons.