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SEMINAR: Adaptive Management: So You Say It’s a Key to Resilience?

November 9, 2015 @ 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm

| Free

SPEAKER: Joshua Stoll, Doctoral Candidate, School of Marine Sciences, Robert and Patricia Switzer Fellow

* See below a list of suggested readings to accompany this seminar.

Eastport HarborMany scholars have called for a paradigm shift in fisheries governance away from management approaches that require definitive information about stock size and dynamics to those that build social-ecological resilience. In this rapidly growing body of research, adaptability is routinely described as one of a short list of mechanisms, along with modularity, diversity, and transformability, that cultivate resilience and buffer systems against social and ecological disturbances. However, while many advocate for adaptability (defined as the capacity of actors to test and revise a system through a dynamic and ongoing process by way of trial and error), the basic assertion that adaptability increases resilience has been largely taken as a given. In this presentation, I draw on multiple data sources and methods to examine the history, evolution, and current status of multiple institutions in Maine, and illustrate how the process of continually modifying the management system by way of trial and error has decreased the resilience of fisheries in Maine. With this analysis I show how the layering of a series of well-intended but myopic species-specific management decisions have affected the general social resilience of the fishing fleet in Maine over a quarter century, whereby bringing increased attention to the complex interplay between adaptability and resilience.

Joshua Stoll is a PhD candidate in the School of Marine Sciences at the University of Maine and a Robert and Patricia Switzer Fellow. His current research focuses on the transition towards ecosystem-based fisheries management in the Gulf of Maine and how different social institutions are impeding (and/or enabling) this change. More broadly, his work seeks to address pressing questions about the interplay between coupled social and ecological systems with the purpose of contributing to the long-term sustainability of our oceans and the communities that depend upon them. Joshua has been engaged in fisheries-related issues for a decade, working in multiple regions and across a wide spectrum of sectors. Most recently, he worked for the directorate of the National Marine Fisheries Service where he gained exposure to the federal policymaking process. Joshua is a co-founder of LocalCatch.org, an international network of small-scale fishers and community-based organizations committed to providing local, healthful, low-impact seafood via community supported fisheries and direct marketing arrangements. He holds a B.A. in Environmental Studies from Bates College and a Masters in Coastal Environmental Management from Duke University.

Suggested Readings:

  • Johnson, Paul. Fish Forever: The Definitive Guide to Understanding, Selecting, and Preparing Healthy, Delicious, and Environmentally Sustainable Seafood. 2007.
  • Greenberg, Paul. Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food. 2010. (304 p)
  • Hay, John. The Run. 1959. (164p) FPBC
  • Woodard, Colin. Ocean’s End: Travels Through Endangered Seas. 2001. FPBC

FPBC=Fields Pond Book Club List

Details

Date:
November 9, 2015
Time:
3:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Cost:
Free
Event Category:
Website:
https://umaine.edu/mitchellcenter/

Organizer

Mitchell Center
Phone
207-581-3195
Email
umgmc@maine.edu
View Organizer Website

Venue

107 Norman Smith Hall
Mitchell Center - UMaine
Orono, ME 04469 United States
+ Google Map
Phone
207-581-3195
View Venue Website
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