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Christopher Costello and Stephen D. Gaines and John Lynham
Abstract
Recent reports suggest that most of the world's commercial fisheries could collapse within decades.
Although poor fisheries governance is often implicated, evaluation of solutions remains rare. Bioeconomic
theory and case studies suggest that rights-based catch shares can provide individual incentives for sustainable
harvest that is less prone to collapse. To test whether catch-share fishery reforms achieve these hypothetical
benefits, we have compiled a global database of fisheries institutions and catch statistics in 11,135 fisheries
from 1950 to 2003. Implementation of catch shares halts, and even reverses, the global trend toward widespread
collapse. Institutional change has the potential for greatly altering the future of global fisheries.
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