Blue Justice Small-Scale Fisheries in a Sustainable Ocean Economy

For small-scale fisheries around the world, the Blue Growth and Blue Economy initiatives may provide sustainable development, but only insofar as they align with the global consensus enshrined in the Voluntary Guidelines for Securing Sustainable Small-Scale Fisheries in the context of Food Security...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Jentoft, Svein (Editor), Chuenpagdee, Ratana (Editor), Bugeja Said, Alicia (Editor), Isaacs, Moenieba (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham Springer International Publishing 2022, 2022
Edition:1st ed. 2022
Series:MARE Publication Series
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Table of Contents:
  • Chapter 30: Blue Justice and Small-Scale Fisher Mobilizations in Istanbul, Turkey: Justice Claims, Political Agency and Alliances
  • Part 11: Justice Needs a Strong Knowledge Foundation
  • Chapter 31: Transdisciplinarity and Blue Justice: The Alianza Nuquí, a Research-Action Platform for Wellbeing and Reflexive Governance in the Colombian Pacific Coast
  • Chapter 32: Strengthening Capabilities of Individuals and Communities through a Small-Scale Fisheries Academy
  • Chapter 33: Understanding Gender Equality in Small-Scale Fisheries and its Role in Enhancing Blue Justice
  • Part 12: Justice is Better Understood from Experience
  • Chapter 34: Collective Experiences, Lessons and Reflections about Blue Justice
  • Chapter 35: Towards Blue Justice for Small-Scale Fisheries
  • Part 1: Justice is Needed in Three Governance Orders
  • Chapter 1: Small-Scale Fisheries in the Blue Economy
  • Chapter 2: Justice in Three Orders
  • Part 2: Justice Issues Have Deep Historical Roots
  • Chapter 3: Coastal Small-Scale Fisheries in Brazil: Resentment against Policy Disarray
  • Chapter 4: Social (In)Justice for Small-Scale Fisherfolk in the Turks And Caicos Islands: Struggling to Stay Afloat in a Tax Haven
  • Chapter 5: Governance for Blue Justice: Examining Struggles and Contradictions in Atlantic Canada’s Small-Scale Fisheries
  • Part 3: Justice Issues Stem from Old and New Conflicts
  • Chapter 6: Conflicts in the Artisanal Fishing Industry of Ghana: Reactions of Fishers to Regulatory Measures
  • Chapter 7: Blue Justice and Small-Scale Fisher Migration: A Case Study from Sri Lanka
  • Chapter 8: Marginalization and Reinvention of Small-Scale Fisheries: A Finnish Case Study of Social Justice
  • Part 4: Justice is Systemic and Multi-Dimensional
  • Chapter 9: An Evaluation of Multidimensional Conflicts in Small-Scale Fisheries in Nigeria
  • Chapter 10: Perception and Reality of Justice in the Small-Scale Fisheries of Nigeria
  • Chapter 11: Making Sense Of Multidimensional Injustice for Creating Viable Small-Scale Fisheries in Chilika Lagoon, Bay of Bengal
  • Part 5: Justice Is a Territorial and Spatial Issue
  • Chapter 12: Legalized Injustices: Old Providence Island (Colombia) Small Scale Fisheries in the Context of Geopolitical Disputes and State Power
  • Chapter 13: Social Conflicts and Fishery Governance Systems in the Estuary and Coast of Pará, Amazonia, Brazil
  • Chapter 14: Flagging Justice Matters in EU Fisheries Local Action Groups (FLAGs)
  • Part 6: Justice is Competitive in Alternative Livelihoods
  • Chapter 15: Adopting a Blue Justice Lens for Japanese Small-Scale Fisheries: Important Insights from the Case of Inatori Kinme Fishery
  • Chapter 16: Feeling the Pinch: Perceived Marginalization of Small-Scale Commercial Crab Fishers by an Expanding Recreational Sector
  • Chapter 17: Making Pescatourism Just for Small-Scale Fisheries: The Case of Turkey and Lessons for Others
  • Part 7: Justice is an Imminent Issue for Inland Fisheries
  • Chapter 18: Exploring Challenges of “Blue Justice” in Landlocked Mountainous Countries: The Case of Nepal
  • Chapter 19: Blue Justice and Inland Fisheries: How Justice Principles Could Support Transformative Knowledge Production in the Mekong Region
  • Chapter 20: Navigating Conflicts to Improve Livelihoods of Traditional Communities Impacted by Hydroelectric Dams
  • Part 8: Justice Issues Are More Evident when in Crisis
  • Chapter 21: The 2019 Brazilian Oil Spill: Perceptions of Affected Fishers
  • Chapter 22: Small-Scale Fishers in the Time of Covid-19: Reinforcing the Inequalities in the Food, Economic and Governance Systems in South Africa and Zimbabwe
  • Chapter 23: Vulnerability and Social Justice among Fishing Households Headed by Women in Batticaloa, Sri Lanka
  • Part 9: Justice is a Priori Condition for SustainableDevelopment
  • Chapter 24: Understanding Vulnerability of Urban Waterfront Communities to Rapid Development: the Case of Lagos Lagoon, Nigeria
  • Chapter 25: Mariculture Parks in the Philippines Push Small-Scale Fishers out of, or far into, the Waters
  • Chapter 26: Incentives to Mariculture Development in Brazil: Environmental Injustice on Traditional Fishing Communities
  • Chapter 27: Pescastemic Rights for Blue Justice: Aquaculture and Coal Power Complexes in Chile
  • Part 10: Justice Is about Going beyond Claims
  • Chapter 28: Institutionalizing Injustice? Aligning Governance Orders in Swedish Small-Scale Fisheries
  • Chapter 29: Navigating Institutional Change in the French Atlantic Fishing Sector: How do Artisanal Fishers Obtain and Secure Fishing Opportunities?