Towards adaptive co-management of small-scale fisheries in Uruguay and Brazil: lessons from using Ostrom’s design principles

被引:48
|
作者
Trimble M. [1 ,2 ]
Berkes F. [1 ]
机构
[1] Natural Resources Institute, University of Manitoba, 70 Dysart Road, Winnipeg
[2] Center for Marine Studies (CEM), Federal University of Parana (UFPR), Av. Beira-mar s/n, Pontal do Sul - Pontal do Parana, 83255-976, PR
关键词
Artisanal fisheries; Comanagement; Commons; Governance; Migration; Participation; Social learning; Social-ecological systems;
D O I
10.1186/s40152-015-0032-y
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The literature on commons has established the validity and significance of Elinor Ostrom’s design principles for collective action. Can these principles be used to guide policies and initiatives towards adaptive co-management? We analyze this idea by using two case studies, Piriápolis (Uruguay) and Paraty (Brazil). Both cases are small-scale fisheries, and both have been experiencing a social-ecological crisis in a context of prevailing top-down government management. However, there are signs that government policies are moving towards participatory governance. The objective of this article is to identify opportunities and barriers to adaptive co-management of small-scale fisheries in Uruguay and Brazil using Ostrom’s design principles for guidance. Both case studies partially meet seven of the eleven design principles (as amended by Cox and colleagues), but do not fulfill four. The analysis of the fisheries using Ostrom’s principles sheds light on the opportunities and barriers to adaptive co-management in three categories: resource system, resource users, and governance system. Barriers include long-standing conflicts between small-scale fishers and government agencies, and between small and large-scale fisheries sectors. Nevertheless, recent initiatives involving participatory approaches to research and management show potential to improve compliance with several principles. Two weaknesses of using Ostrom’s principles for the analysis of the cases were a lack of attention to social learning and the exclusion of external drivers. © 2015, Trimble and Berkes.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 45 条
  • [41] "It's About Seeing What's Actually Out There": Quantifying fishers' ecological knowledge and biases in a small-scale commercial fishery as a path toward co-management
    Carr, Liam M.
    Heyman, William D.
    OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT, 2012, 69 : 118 - 132
  • [42] Using common-pool resource design principles to assess the viability of community-based fisheries co-management systems in American Samoa and Hawai'i
    Levine, Arielle
    Richmond, Laurie
    MARINE POLICY, 2015, 62 : 9 - 17
  • [43] Assessing the dynamics of small-scale coastal fisheries using public participatory GIS with structural equation model for fisheries management in Jakarta's coastal area, Indonesia
    Rachman, Faizal
    Huang, Jinliang
    Suadi
    OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT, 2025, 262
  • [44] Thirty Years from the Brink: Governing through Principles for Newfoundland and Labrador's Small-Scale Fisheries since the Groundfish Moratoria and Prospects for the Future
    Andrews, Evan J.
    Chuenpagdee, Ratana
    Stanley, Nathan D.
    Neis, Barbara
    Foley, Paul
    Command, Rylan J.
    Saul, Lillian
    OCEAN YEARBOOK, 2022, 36 (01): : 239 - 267
  • [45] Using off-the-shelf GPS loggers to assess co-occurrence between marine mammals and small-scale fisheries: a pilot study from the Mediterranean Sea
    Glarou, Maria
    Kerametsidis, Georgios
    Akkaya, Aylin
    Beqiri, Kristian
    Nikpaljevic, Natasa
    Awbery, Tim
    Bakiu, Rigers
    Geijer, Christina K. A.
    JOURNAL OF THE MARINE BIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM, 2022, 102 (05) : 322 - 332