Judged by a dismaying track record and a consequent downturn in the
reputation of fisheries scientists, fisheries management is certainly a
candidate for calls for reinvention, with many of the world leaders in
this area holding the view that no fishery has ever been properly
understood or managed. With fisheries science in a state of flux, this
extremely important book seeks a new paradigm that will place this flux
of ideas in perspective and help us to choose those that will make
fisheries management work.
The book was planned at a symposium of over 100 fishery researchers at
the Fisheries Centre, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
and is organized into five parts: Why does Fisheries Science Need
Reinventing?; New Policies; The Role of the Social Sciences; Ecology;
Modelling.
Carefully integrated and edited by three of the world's leading fishery
scientists, this stimulating book should find a place on the shelves of
all fishery scientists throughout the world. It will be an invaluable
reference source to those studying fish biology, fisheries and
oceanography and all those involved in fisheries policy decisions in
government and university research establishments.