Can policy perception influence social resilience to policy change

This paper addresses the question of whether policy perception can erode or enhance the ability of commercial fishers to be resilient to changes in fisheries policy. An understanding of the way that fishers perceive resource policies provides fisheries managers with the opportunity to refine policy design and delivery so as to better protect system resilience. Policy perception is assessed by asking commercial fishers how they perceive their level of involvement in the policy decision-making process and interpret equity, the likely socio-economic impacts, conservation effectiveness and the rate of implementation (of generic policies). Social resilience to policy change is examined by assessing a fisher's (i) perception of risk associated with change, (ii) ability to plan, learn and reorganise, (iii) ability to cope, and (iv) level of interest in change. One hundred commercial fishers in five coastal communities were quantitatively and qualitatively surveyed. A negative perception of policy was found to significantly and adversely influence the behaviour and emotional response of commercial fishers, which, as described here, influences their resilience. For policy perception to be positive and resilience to be enhanced, fishers need to be meaningfully involved in the decision-making process, change needs to be implemented at an appropriate rate, and effort is required to ensure that equity, anticipated impacts and conservation effectiveness are positively interpreted. This knowledge can assist in the development of fisheries management strategies aimed at maintaining and enhancing socio-ecological resilience.

[1]  Jeffrey C. Johnson,et al.  Applications of social science theory to fisheries management: Three examples , 1992 .

[2]  K. P. Currens,et al.  A Framework for Assessing Genetic Vulnerability , 1995 .

[3]  C. S. Holling,et al.  Resilience and Sustainable Development: Building Adaptive Capacity in a World of Transformations , 2002, Ambio.

[4]  C. Bailey,et al.  Resource dependency and development options in coastal Southeast Asia , 1996 .

[5]  T. Hennessey,et al.  The Paradox of Fairness: The Impact of Escalating Complexity on Fishery Management (extended abstract) , 1998 .

[6]  Ronald Bass,et al.  Evaluating environmental justice under the national environmental policy act , 1998 .

[7]  Edward G. Carmines,et al.  Measurement in the social sciences , 1980 .

[8]  R. Salz Social Justice and the Florida Net Ban Controversy , 1998 .

[9]  P. Hale,et al.  Management for Sustainable Ecosystems , 2000 .

[10]  A. J. Underwood,et al.  Experiments in Ecology: Their Logical Design and Interpretation Using Analysis of Variance , 1997 .

[11]  C. Holling,et al.  Command and Control and the Pathology of Natural Resource Management , 1996 .

[12]  C. Folke,et al.  Linking Social and Ecological Systems: Management Practices and Social Mechanisms for Building Resilience , 1998 .

[13]  D. Wilson,et al.  Social theory and fisheries co-management , 1998 .

[14]  K. Cochrane,et al.  Reconciling sustainability, economic efficiency and equity in fisheries: the one that got away? , 2000 .

[15]  G. Waitt,et al.  Ecologically Sustainable Fishing in Theory and Practice: Individual transferable quotas in Australia's South East Fishery , 2000 .

[16]  G. Israel,et al.  After the Florida Net Ban: The Impacts on Commercial Fishing Families , 2003 .

[17]  D. Bellwood,et al.  New paradigms for supporting the resilience of marine ecosystems. , 2005, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[18]  Nadine Marshall,et al.  Conceptualizing and operationalizing social resilience within commercial fisheries in northern Australia , 2007 .

[19]  Courtland L. Smith,et al.  Resolving allocation conflicts in fishery management , 1993 .

[20]  John H. Harms,et al.  A Comparison of Conservation Perspectives Between Scientists, Managers, and Industry in the West Coast Groundfish Fishery , 2001 .

[21]  Peter J S Jones Marine nature reserves in Britain: past lessons, current status and future issues , 1999 .

[22]  Steven E. Stemler,et al.  An Overview of Content Analysis. , 2001 .

[23]  C. Bailey Lessons from Indonesia's 1980 trawler ban , 1997 .

[24]  Social Sustainability and Collaborative Learning , 2005 .

[25]  S. Arnstein,et al.  Ladder of Citizen Participation , 2020 .

[26]  S. Jentoft,et al.  From the bottom up: Participatory issues in fisheries management , 1996 .

[27]  D. Lane,et al.  Fisheries management science: the framework to link biological, economic, and social objectives in fisheries management , 1995 .

[28]  W. Adger Social and ecological resilience: are they related? , 2000 .

[29]  David Svmes Fisheries Management and the Social Sciences: A Way Forward? , 1996 .

[30]  Talcott Parsons,et al.  Book Reviews : SOCIETIES : EVOLUTIONARY AND COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES. By Talcott Parsons. London: Prentice Hall, 1967. Pp. 120. Price 12s. 6d , 1968 .

[31]  Juha Hiedanpää,et al.  The edges of conflict and consensus: a case for creativity in regional forest policy in Southwest Finland , 2005 .

[32]  B. McCay optimal foragers or political actors? ecological analyses of a New Jersey fishery , 1981 .

[33]  C. Folke,et al.  Navigating social–ecological systems: building resilience for complexity and change: Fikret Berkes, Johan Colding and Carl Folke (Eds.). Cambridge University Press, 2003. xxi + 393 pages. ISBN 0-521-81592-4 (hardback), £65 , 2004 .

[34]  H. Daly,et al.  Managing Our Environmental Portfolio , 2000 .

[35]  Gary K. Meffe,et al.  Crisis in a Crisis Discipline , 2001 .

[36]  Yosef Jabareen,et al.  A knowledge map for describing variegated and conflict domains of sustainable development , 2004 .

[37]  B. B. Walters,et al.  Community history and rural development: why some farmers participate more readily than others , 1999 .

[38]  James M. Acheson,et al.  Chaos, complexity and community management of fisheries☆ , 1994 .

[39]  Neil Ward,et al.  Coping with Crisis in Cumbria: The Consequences of Foot and Mouth , 2002 .

[40]  Stephen R. Carpenter,et al.  Spatial complexity, resilience and policy diversity: fishing on lake-rich landscapes , 2004 .

[41]  Richard C. Stedmanl Sense of place as an indicator of community sustainability , 1999 .

[42]  P. Fricke Use of sociological data in the allocation of common property resources: A comparison of practices , 1985 .

[43]  Patrick C. West,et al.  Social impact assessment and environmental conflict management: Potential for integration and application , 1990 .

[44]  Alexandra Winkels,et al.  Migration, Remittances, Livelihood Trajectories, and Social Resilience , 2002, Ambio.

[45]  Digby Race,et al.  The Twists and Turns of Community Participation in Natural Resource Management in Australia: What is Missing? , 2001 .

[46]  Carl Folke,et al.  Navigating social-ecological systems , 2006 .

[47]  C. S. Holling,et al.  Sustainability, Stability, and Resilience , 1997 .

[48]  Anthony Charles,et al.  Fishery conflicts: A unified framework , 1992 .

[49]  Lianjun Zhang,et al.  The Relationship Between Timber Production, Local Historical Events, and Community Social Change: A Quantitative Case Study , 1993, Forestry sciences.

[50]  W. Freudenburg,et al.  Applying Sociology to Policy: Social Science and the Environmental Impact Statement. , 1985 .

[51]  B. Tabachnick,et al.  Using Multivariate Statistics , 1983 .

[52]  M. Manfredo,et al.  Concepts for Exploring the Social Aspects of Human–Wildlife Conflict in a Global Context , 2004 .

[53]  Valuing the Social Dimension: Social Assessment in the Regional Forest Agreement Process , 1998 .

[54]  J. Walter Milon,et al.  Sociocultural effects of a market-based fishery management program in the Florida Keys. , 2000 .

[55]  Partha Dasgupta,et al.  Resilience in natural and socioeconomic systems , 1998 .

[56]  Stephen G. Sutton,et al.  How Resource Dependency Can Influence Social Resilience within a Primary Resource Industry. , 2007 .