000 02415naa a22005297a 4500
003 CR-SiIICA
005 20200203202648.0
006 a|||||r|||| 00| 0
007 ta
008 870101e cr |||||r|||| 00| | eng d
020 _a0-88936-312-9
040 _cCR-SiIICA
041 _aeng
_beng
090 _aINVES-ET P01 E58
100 _995103
_aMoloney, D.G.
100 _965074
_aEnglish, H.E.
100 _9117422
_aScott, A.
110 _99484
_aIDRC, Ottawa (Canadá)
111 _932079
_a12. Pacific Trade and Development Conference
_cVancouver (Canadá)
_d7-11 Set 1981
245 _aCanadian regulation of Pacific fisheries
245 _aRenewable resource in the Pacific
260 _aOttawa (Canadá)
_c1982
270 _aIICA Prog II, San José (Costa Rica)
300 _ap. 144-155
440 _9170120
_aIDRC (Canadá)
_vno. 181e
500 _aSum. (En, Fr)
520 _aThe rich fish stocks on Canada's west coast have been commercially exploited for a century and regulated by the Canadian government for many decades. The salmon, halibut, and roe herring fisheries are the most important, and the efforts to manage the stocks since the introduction of extended fisheries jurisdiction (EFJ) provide insights into the special requirements in managing migratory species (salmon) and fisheries, such as roe herring, that are dependent on export markets. Early efforts were based almost entirely on biologic considerations. Starting in the 1960s, limited entry programs were used in an attempt to reduce economic inefficiencies and to protect the stocks, but these failed because the economic incentives to remaining participants were unchanged. Landings taxes and trasferable quotas have been proposed as means of rationalizing these fisheries, but any scheme that fails to address the crucial links - biologic, economic, and internatonal - cannot succeed
690 _9158144
_aPESCA
690 _9134484
_aADMINISTRACION DE RECURSOS
690 _9134500
_aADMINISTRACION PESQUERA
690 _9134403
_aACUERDOS INTERNACIONALES
690 _9139157
_aCANADA
901 _aE20
_b03330
902 _aM12
903 _aKE
904 _aIICA
905 _aC
906 _a19870101
907 _aIICA Prog II, San José (Costa Rica)
908 _aB
909 _aAM
912 _aeng
914 _aINVESTIG
914 _aEXTRA
942 _cANA
942 _cIMP
999 _c9205
_d9205