Exploring the Use of Conceptual Models to Identify Scenarios, Lessons, and Entry Points for...

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Exploring the Use of Conceptual Models to Identify Scenarios, Lessons, and Entry Points for Community-scale Marine Resource Tenure and Governance Dr. Catherine Courtney Tetra Tech, Inc.

Transcript of Exploring the Use of Conceptual Models to Identify Scenarios, Lessons, and Entry Points for...

Exploring the Use of Conceptual Models to Identify

Scenarios, Lessons, and Entry Points for Community-scale Marine Resource

Tenure and Governance

Dr. Catherine Courtney

Tetra Tech, Inc.

Small-scale fisheries…..

Status of World Fisheries

FAO 2012

FAO 2011

World Capture Fisheries Production

Significance of Small-scale Fisheries to Food Security and Poverty Alleviation

Attributes Large-scale Fisheries Small-scale Fisheries

# people employed ~ ½ million > 12 million

Annual tons caught ~ 30 million ~ 30 million

Annual tons fuel ~37 million ~5 million

Annual tons of fish discarded

8 – 20 million Very little

Annual $ in subsidies 25 – 27 billion 5 – 7 billion

Jacquet and Pauly 2008

Explore the conditions under which

community-scale marine resource tenure and governance

contributes to sustainable fisheries, biodiversity conservation, and climate change adaptation

Outline:• Characterize main components of the social-ecological system • Present a conceptual model to diagnose interactions• Explore four scenarios with examples from the literature• Suggest several entry points for strengthening community-scale

marine tenure and governance

Social-Ecological System Framework

Ostrom 2013

Complex Tropical Marine Ecosystems

Green et al 2013

Tropical Multi-species Fishery

Green et al 2013

Complexity of Actors

• Small-scale/artisanal fishers• Large-scale/industrial fishers• Other marine resource users (e.g. oil and

gas, mariculture, tourism)

Complexity of Tenure and Governance Regimes

• Community-scale Tenure and Governance– Customary– Informal– Devolved

• Co-management– Consultative– Delegated– Collaborative

Adapted from Berkes 2010

External/Local Drivers and Threats

• Population growth/ migration

• Coastal development• Land use practices• New technologies• Global trade• Poverty• Global climate change

• Overfishing• Illegal fishing• Habitat destruction• Watershed-based

pollution• Climate change

impacts

Exploring Conceptual Models to Diagnose Interactions and Outcomes

Four Scenarios

• Scenario 1: Community-scale marine resource tenure in a sea of open access

• Scenario 2: Passing the buck through decentralization• Scenario 3: Multiple knowledge sources and scales for

adaptive co-management• Scenario 4: Linked ecological and social vulnerability in

marine resource dependent communities

Scenario 1: Community-scale Marine Tenure in a Sea of Open Access

Tale of Two Coastal Villages in Mexico (Basurto et al. 2012)

• Seri– Indigenous land and

marine tenure rights recognized by government

– Excluded outsiders, established rules

– Fisheries recovered in area under tenure

• Kino– Fish buyers have

control (own permits, gear)

– Fishers employed by buyers

– Overfishing in adjacent areas

Scenario 2: Passing the Buck through Decentralization

Decentralized fisheries management in the Philippines

• National legal framework supports preferential use of nearshore water by small-scale fishers

• Management responsibility over 15 km from the shore decentralized to over 850 municipalities and cities

• Fishers and other local stakeholders serve on advisory bodies to local governments

Perez et al 2012Pomeroy et al 2010

Courtney et al. 2002

Scenario 3: Multiple Knowledge Sources and Scales for Adaptive Co-Management

Adaptive management in customary tenure regimes in Papua New Guinea and Indonesia (Cinner et al. 2006)

Ecosystem-based management in Huave Lagoon, Southern Mexico (Espinoza-Tenerio et al., 2013)

Ecosystem-based management

Transdisciplinary modeling

Traditional ecological knowledge

• Scenarios based on different rule configurations

• Broader social –ecological system processes

• Fine scale delineation of 6 seascapes

Scenario 4: Linked Social-Ecological

Vulnerability in Marine Resource Dependent

Communities

Social-ecological vulnerability in Kenyan coastal communities (Cinner et al. 2013)

• Lower vulnerability in communities with more effective management systems

• Adaptive capacity varied among communities

• One-size-fits-all to adaptation planning unlikely to succeed

Marshal et al. 2012

Entry Points for Strengthening Community-scale Marine Tenure and Governance

Recognize community-scale

tenure rights

Strengthen local institutional

capacity

Develop effective co-management arrangements

Reduce vulnerability of community-scale management of small-scale

fisheries from external drivers

Build knowledge base for

ecosystem-scale processes

Thank you!

For more information on USAID’s Land Tenure and Property Rights Portfolio

Visit:

http://usaidlandtenure.net/