218 Pages 20 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    218 Pages 20 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Taking a social science approach, this book explores the governance of sustainable seafood, which is fundamental to food and nutrition security as well as being an important source of income and employment in many regions.

    Due to the importance of protein and other fishery and aquaculture by-products, many wild fisheries are coming under pressure, and this increasing demand has created a strong driver to expand aquaculture. As a result, the social and environmental sustainability of these production systems have come into question. The authors of the book explore the governance of sustainable seafood, taking into account the rise of social movements through environmental non-governmental organisations, the nature and perceived limits of government regulation within and beyond the state, and the promise of market-based approaches to governance such as ecolabelling. The book focuses on how concern over sustainable seafood has been translated into different current forms of governance. It then assesses what alternative governance approaches are starting to emerge that combine movements, states and markets for sustainable seafood production and consumption, and their effects. The book concludes with a vision for the future through key principles for evaluating the collective impact of governing sustainable seafood.

    This timely volume will be key reading for researchers interested in fisheries and aquaculture governance, as well as coastal and marine policies and sustainable food movements more broadly. It will also be of interest to practitioners and policymakers engaged in creating fishery policies and sustainable fishery development.

    1. Governing Seafood: An introduction

    Part I Understanding Sustainable Seafood

    2. Understanding sustainable seafood governance

    3. The global dynamics of sustainable seafood

    Part II Governing Sustainable Seafood

    4. Public regulation of fisheries and aquaculture

    5. Governing seafood through markets

    6. Beyond labelling – alternative approaches to seafood sustainability

    Part III The future of Sustainable Seafood

    7. Towards a social understanding of the sustainable seafood movement

    8. The future of sustainable seafood

    Biography

    Simon R. Bush is professor and chair of the Environmental Policy Group at Wageningen University, the Netherlands. He is also associate editor of the journals Maritime Studies and Environmental Development.

    Peter Oosterveer is professor of global food governance in the Environmental Policy Group at Wageningen University, the Netherlands. He is the author of Food, Globalization and Sustainability (Routledge, 2011).

    'Governing Sustainable Seafood is a book I recommend to those with more classical fisheries management and production-oriented background, as an introduction to a social science approach to addressing sea-food, and to those with a deep understanding of these issues, but wanting an innocative and integrative narrative to push their boundaries...This team is perfectly matched to the challenge of synthesizing sustainable seafood governance and introducing a future agenda. The fisheries and aquaculture expertise of Bush is complemented by the global food governance expertise of Oosterveer. Together the authors expertly weave together local and global narratives of seafood sustainability with ease, flowing from specificity to abstraction effortlessly.'

    Megan Bailey, Ocean Yearbook 2021