Economics of Fisheries Development
By (Author) Rowena M. Lawson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
30th October 2013
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Fisheries and related industries
338.3727091724
Hardback
288
599g
Following the introduction of the 200-mile extended economic zone (EEZ), many developing countries suddenly found they had large fish resources, which wisely managed and exploited could generate wealth and income of immense benefit. However, one constraint to this was that many countries, for historic reasons, lacked the expertise to manage fisheries on this scale. Despite the need for information, few economists and especially development economists teaching in universities and colleges were able to incorporate fisheries economics into their courses owing to the lack of readily accessible material. As a result, many rising economists were failing to recognize the global importance of fishers as an economic resource capable of generating substantial wealth and income to many countries. Economics of Fisheries Development provides an accessible exploration of this area of economics, introducing development economists to some of the problems of developing fisheries in areas of the world where fisheries now present great growth prospects. The case studies used throughout the book are nearly entirely drawn from developing countries.
Rowena M. Lawson is an economist who has written extensively on developing economies.