2018
DOI: 10.1111/faf.12296
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Evaluating and implementing social–ecological systems: A comprehensive approach to sustainable fisheries

Abstract: Fisheries sustainability is recognized to have four pillars: ecological, economic, social (including cultural) and institutional (or governance). Although international agreements, and legislation in many jurisdictions, call for implementation of all four pillars of sustainability, the social, economic and institutional aspects (i.e., the “human dimensions”) have not been comprehensively and collectively addressed to date. This study describes a framework for comprehensive fisheries evaluation developed by the… Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(59 citation statements)
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“…The first reason is that doing so demands openly acknowledging that some will benefit while others experience diminished or constrained opportunities, and that social and economic disparities may well exacerbate as the years go on (Carothers & Chambers, ; Hilborn et al, ). The second reason is that social indicators to monitor access and other human dimensions are often perceived to be challenging to develop and integrate (Stephenson, Paul, et al, ; Stephenson, Wiber, et al, ). This paper advances conceptual and practical approaches to both and helps to pave the path forward for fisheries research and evaluation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The first reason is that doing so demands openly acknowledging that some will benefit while others experience diminished or constrained opportunities, and that social and economic disparities may well exacerbate as the years go on (Carothers & Chambers, ; Hilborn et al, ). The second reason is that social indicators to monitor access and other human dimensions are often perceived to be challenging to develop and integrate (Stephenson, Paul, et al, ; Stephenson, Wiber, et al, ). This paper advances conceptual and practical approaches to both and helps to pave the path forward for fisheries research and evaluation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to conceptual advance, the distinction is also pragmatic in that it attests to the applicability of evaluation frameworks that incorporate access as a human dimension or social indicator (e.g. Breslow et al, ; Stephenson, Paul, et al, ; Stephenson, Wiber, et al, ). In the case of Stephenson, Paul, et al (), for example, the approach we have taken could be used to generate values for several candidate performance indicators including ‘per cent control of each stage of the value chain’, ‘distribution of access by fisheries participants’ and ‘well‐being and equity including in allocations and access’.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Integrating the four pillars of sustainability into fisheries governance is a major challenge (e.g., Rindorf et al 2017b, Benson and Stephenson 2018. Current fisheries assessment and management plans focus almost exclusively on ecological performance and neglect the "human dimension" made up of social, economic, and governance aspects (Symes and Phillipson 2009, Coulthard et al 2011, Gutiérrez et al 2011.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%