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

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Brown, Ausbon, Jr., James A. Bohnsack, and Douglas Harper (1989).<br />

"Automated Landings Assessment for Responsive Management (ALARM):<br />

Gulf <strong>of</strong> Mexico Commercial Reef Fish Landings, December 1989."<br />

Contribution No. CRD-89/90-02, National Oceanic and Atmospheric<br />

Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service, Southeast<br />

Fisheries Center, Miami Laboratory, Coastal Resources Division, 75<br />

Virginia Beach Dr., Miami, FL, December, 4 pp.<br />

Summary <strong>of</strong> red snapper landings in graphical form from 1979 to 1987.<br />

Brown, Bradford (1995). Briefing Document Blue Tuna. Draft report,<br />

Southeast Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service,<br />

75 Virginia Beach Drive, Miami, FL, 13 pp.<br />

A history <strong>of</strong> the ICCAT bluefin tuna work from the perspective <strong>of</strong> the<br />

author.<br />

Brown, Gardner, Jr. (1974). "An Optimal Program for Managing Common<br />

Property Resources with Congestion Externalities." Journal <strong>of</strong><br />

Political Economy, Jan/Feb:161-173.<br />

This paper derives an optimum program for managing a common property<br />

natural resource whose rate <strong>of</strong> growth <strong>of</strong> the resource stock depends on the<br />

resource stock level and the current rate <strong>of</strong> extraction. If the resource<br />

stock initially is sufficiently small it is shown that it will be socially<br />

optimal to have a period <strong>of</strong> no extraction. When extraction begins, it and the<br />

variable factor increase faster than the resource stock is increasing.<br />

Changes reflecting the imputed marginal social value <strong>of</strong> the resource are a<br />

decreasing function <strong>of</strong> the level <strong>of</strong> the stock. These results differ from<br />

Smith (1968) recent static treatment <strong>of</strong> the same problem and are discussed<br />

below.<br />

Brown, Gardner, Jr. (1981). "Hedonic Demand Functions with Linear and<br />

Non-Linear Budget Constraints." Draft report, Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Economics, University <strong>of</strong> Washington, November, 35 pp.<br />

Consumers do not always face constant unit prices for the goods and<br />

services they purchase. The urban and environmental <strong>literature</strong> abounds in<br />

examples where implicit prices are nonlinear. We show that nonlinear budget<br />

constraints fundamentally alter the demand relationship. The exogenous<br />

parameter (marginal price) consumers face in the linear case is replaced by an<br />

exogenous price function (the price gradient) in the nonlinear case. Two ways<br />

are developed in Section II to solve the demand functional: a parametric<br />

approach and a system equation approach.<br />

Brown, Gardner, M. (1997). Economic Review <strong>of</strong> the Red Snapper Fishery. <br />

Draft report for U.S. Department <strong>of</strong> Commerce, National Oceanic and<br />

Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service,<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Economics University <strong>of</strong> Washington, Box 353330, Seattle,<br />

Washington, September, 25 pp.<br />

It would be a very rare fishery for which the economic analysis is<br />

adequate. <br />

Brown, Gardner, Jr. and J. John Charbonneau (1978). "The Value <strong>of</strong><br />

Wildlife Estimated by the Hedonic Approach." Working Paper No. 6,<br />

Division <strong>of</strong> Program Plans, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, March,<br />

25 pp.<br />

9 1

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