Joshua Stoll
Websites:
Research Interests
- Ocean Governance
- Coastal Community Resilience
- Fisheries Policy
- Social-Ecological Systems
- Food systems
Research Projects
- Fishing in Hot Water: Defining Sentinel Indicators of Resilience in the American Lobster Fishery
- Nested Ecosystem-Based Fisheries
News and Updates
- Lobster fishery resilience study cited in NPR story (Mitchell Center News, Oct. 1, 2021)
- Stoll and Local Catch Network featured on Good Morning America (Aug. 18, 2021)
- Local Catch Network helps small-scale fisheries seek USDA funding (Mitchell Center News, July 2021)
- “A fishy tail about our food system” (Mitchell Center Sustainability Talk, April 19, 2021)
- Navigating change: Cultivating resilience in fisheries and coastal communities (Mitchell Center feature story, March 2021)
- As coronavirus threatens seafood economy, community fisheries find ways to stay afloat (The Conversation, April 2020)
Degrees
- PhD, Ecology & Environmental Sciences, University of Maine
- MEM, Environmental Management, Duke University
- BA, Environmental Studies, Bates College
- Post-Doctoral Fellow, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Profile
Josh is an Associate Professor of Marine Policy in the School of Marine Sciences. He works on research questions related to marine resource governance and the interplay between human institutions and the social-ecological systems within which they are situated. His aim is to take a transdisciplinary approach that is informed by direct and ongoing engagement with industry, government, and non-profit partners and which generates knowledge, information, and resources that support the long-term viability of coastal fisheries in Maine and beyond.
Josh’s research team is currently working on a range of interdisciplinary projects related to ecosystem-based fisheries management, seafood distribution and trade, community resilience, and aquaculture.
Selected Publications
Cucuzza, M., Stoll, J. S., & Leslie, H. M. (2021). Evaluating the theoretical and practical linkages between ecosystem-based fisheries management and fisheries co-management. Marine Policy, 126, 104390.
Love, David C., Elizabeth M. Nussbaumer, Jamie Harding, Jessica A. Gephart, James L. Anderson, Frank Asche, Joshua S. Stoll, Andrew L. Thorne-Lyman, and Martin W. Bloem. (2021). Risks shift along seafood supply chains. Global Food Security 28, 100476.
Love, D. C., Allison, E. H., Asche, F., Belton, B., Cottrell, R. S., Froehlich, H. E., Gephart, J. A., Hicks, C. C., Little, D. C., Nussbaumer, E. M., de Silva, P. P., Poulain, F., Rubio, A., Stoll, J. S., Tlusty, M. F., Thorne-Lyman, A. L., Troell, M., Zhang, W. (2021). Emerging COVID-19 impacts, responses, and lessons for building resilience in the seafood system. Global Food Security, 100494.
Campbell, L. M., Fairbanks, L., Murray, G., Stoll, J. S., D’Anna, L., & Bingham, J. (2021). From Blue Economy to Blue Communities: reorienting aquaculture expansion for community wellbeing. Marine Policy, 124, 104361.
Cucuzza, M., Stoll, J. S., & Leslie, H. M. (2020). Comprehensive plans as tools for enhancing coastal community resilience. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 63(11), 2022-2041.
Stoll, J.S., Harrison, H.L., De Sousa, E., Callaway, D., Collier, M., Harrell, K., Jones, B., Kastlunger, J., Kramer, E., Kurian, S. and Lovewell, A. (2020). Alternative seafood networks during COVID-19: Implications for resilience and sustainability.
Stoll, J. S., Bailey, M., & Jonell, M. (2020). Alternative pathways to sustainable seafood. Conservation Letters, 13(1), e12683.
Silver, J. J., & Stoll, J. S. (2019). How do commercial fishing licences relate to access?. Fish and Fisheries, 20(5), 993-1004.
Stoll, J. S., Leslie, H. M., Britsch, M. L., & Cleaver, C. M. (2019). Evaluating aquaculture as a diversification strategy for Maine’s commercial fishing sector in the face of change. Marine Policy, 107, 103583.
Runnebaum, J. M., Maxwell, E. A., Stoll, J. S., Pianka, K. E., & Oppenheim, N. G. (2019). Communication, relationships, and relatability influence stakeholder perceptions of credible science. Fisheries, 44(4), 164-171.
Farr, E. R., Stoll, J. S., & Beitl, C. M. (2018). Effects of fisheries management on local ecological knowledge. Ecology and Society, 23(3).
Stoll, J. S., Crona, B. I., Fabinyi, M., & Farr, E. R. (2018). Seafood trade routes for lobster obscure teleconnected vulnerabilities. Frontiers in Marine Science, 5, 239.
Fuller, E. C., Samhouri, J. F., Stoll, J. S., Levin, S. A., & Watson, J. R. (2017). Characterizing fisheries connectivity in marine social–ecological systems. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 74(8), 2087-2096.
Stoll, J., E. Fuller, B. Crona. Uneven adaptive capacity among fishers in a sea of change. PLOS One. 12 (2017): 1-13.
Stoll, J. Fishing for leadership: The role diversification plays in facilitating change agents. Journal of Environmental Management 199 (2017): 74-82.
Witter, A. and J. Stoll. Participation and resistance: alternative seafood marketing in a neoliberal era. Marine Policy (Special Issue). 80 (2017): 130-140.