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annotated bibliography of fisheries economics literature - Office of ...

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Milazzo, Matteo (1997). Trip Report: South East Atlantic Fisheries. <br />

Memorandum to Gary Matlock through Dean Swanson, December 18.<br />

A detailed trip report <strong>of</strong> an international meeting held in Windhoek,<br />

Namibia to lay the groundwork for the establishment <strong>of</strong> a new regional<br />

<strong>fisheries</strong> management body - the South East Atlantic Fisheries Organization<br />

(SEAFO). In addition to a summary <strong>of</strong> the consultation process, a review <strong>of</strong><br />

the Namibian <strong>fisheries</strong> and protected species is included. One <strong>of</strong> the most<br />

contentious issues was the sharing <strong>of</strong> economic benefits from the exploitation<br />

<strong>of</strong> highseas stocks between distant water fleets and coastal states.<br />

Milazzo, Matteo (1998). Managing Capacity in World Fisheries. A Draft U.S.<br />

Position Paper, <strong>Office</strong> <strong>of</strong> Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine<br />

Fisheries Service, Silver Spring, MD.<br />

A draft position paper prepared for an informal meeting on excess<br />

capacity in fishing fleets between the U.S., Japan, Mexico, and the European<br />

Union prior to the October FAO formal consultation on managing capacity in<br />

Rome.<br />

Milazzo, Matteo (1998). Managing <strong>of</strong> Fishing Capacity. U.S. Position Paper,<br />

<strong>Office</strong> <strong>of</strong> Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service,<br />

Silver Spring, MD, October, 7 pp.<br />

A position paper prepared for the October 26-30, 1998 FAO Consultations<br />

on excess capacity in global <strong>fisheries</strong>.<br />

Milazzo, Matteo (1998). Subsidies in World Fisheries. World Bank Technical<br />

Paper No. 406, The World Bank, 1818 H Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.<br />

The first effort to estimate the order <strong>of</strong> magnitude <strong>of</strong> major subsidies<br />

to the fishing sector on a world wide basis is made. The findings support<br />

earlier assumptions that massive levels <strong>of</strong> subsidies have indeed been a major<br />

driving force behind much <strong>of</strong> the expansion <strong>of</strong> fishing effort in many parts <strong>of</strong><br />

the world.<br />

Milazzo, Matteo, John M. Ward, and Theo Brainerd (1999). National Capacity<br />

Task Force FY 2000 Work Plan. Draft report, <strong>Office</strong> <strong>of</strong> Sustainable<br />

Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service, Silver Spring, MD., 3 pp.<br />

Work plan to complete the training in and estimation <strong>of</strong> capacity for<br />

selected domestic commercial and recreational <strong>fisheries</strong>.<br />

Miller, David L. (1994). Learning from the Mexican Experience: Area<br />

Apportionment as a Potential Strategy for Limiting Access and Promoting<br />

Conservation <strong>of</strong> the Florida Lobster Fishery. In Karyn L. Gimbel (ed.)<br />

Limiting Access to Marine Fisheries: Keeping the Focus on Conservation,<br />

Center for Marine Conservation and the World Wildlife Fund, Washington,<br />

D.C.<br />

In discussing the organization <strong>of</strong> Mexico s lobster fishery, this paper<br />

seeks to illustrate how one fishing cooperative s common property resource<br />

management system reduces the problem <strong>of</strong> free ridership by granting individual<br />

property rights. In so doing, the paper provides a preliminary exploration <strong>of</strong><br />

how the relative disorder characterizing the Florida lobster fishery<br />

(overcapitalization, poaching, trap theft or destruction, race to fish,<br />

conflicts with recreational harvesters, etc.) Might be reduced further if<br />

the newly instituted access limiting trap quota system were to include<br />

provisions for the allocation <strong>of</strong> individual (sea floor) property rights.<br />

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