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30 March 2015 Advancing Marine Policy Toward Ecosystem-Based Management by Eliciting Public Preferences
Sophal Chhun, Viktoria Kahui, Henrik Moller, Paul Thorsnes
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Abstract

The implementation of marine protected areas, such as marine reserves and customary fishing areas, is considered an important step toward advancing ecosystem-based management (EBM), but has proven difficult due to resistance from well-organized fishing interests. This raises the question of how the values of less well-organised parties can be brought into the political decision-making process. We summarise the results of a discrete choice survey of the general public in New Zealand that elicits willingness to make tradeoffs among taxes and four socio-ecological attributes: biodiversity, maintenance of Maori customary practices, and restrictions on commercial and recreational fishing. We apply cluster analysis, which provides information about political ‘market shares’ of respondent preferences, and derive estimates of average public willingness to pay for various policy scenarios. Both analyses reveal broad-scale support for conservation of biodiversity and cultural practices, providing quantifiable input from the public in the process of marine space reallocation.

JEL Codes: Q22, Q51, Q57.

© 2015 MRE Foundation, Inc. All rights reserved.
Sophal Chhun, Viktoria Kahui, Henrik Moller, and Paul Thorsnes "Advancing Marine Policy Toward Ecosystem-Based Management by Eliciting Public Preferences," Marine Resource Economics 30(3), 261-275, (30 March 2015). https://doi.org/10.1086/681052
Received: 19 June 2014; Accepted: 1 February 2015; Published: 30 March 2015
JOURNAL ARTICLE
15 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
choice experiment
fisheries
public preferences
spatial conflict
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