Volume 55

Caribbean Coastal Resources Co­management – Part 1


Authors
McConney, P.; Pomeroy, R.S.; Mahon, R.
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Other Information


Date: 2004


Pages: 119-131


Event: Proceedings of the Fifty Fifth Annual Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute


City: Xel Ha


Country: Mexico

Abstract

Coastal resources co-management is a relatively recent development in the systems of natural resources governance in the English-speaking Caribbean. There is much interest in co-management among government agencies and non-governmental organisations, ranging from consulting with stakeholders to delegated and community-based management. Resource users are less familiar with the concept. The Coastal and Marine Management Program (CaMMP) of the Caribbean Conservation Association (CCA) is implementing a projecton developing guidelines for successful coastal resources co-management in the Caribbean. It is part of the United Kingdom Department for Intemational Development (DFID) Natural Resources Systems Programme (NRSP) for the Land-Water Interface. Cases of co-management initiatives in Barbados (sea urchins and Fisheries Advisoty Committee), Belize (marine protected area and Fisheries Advisoty Board), and Grenada (lobster and seine net fisheries) are being documented. Less detailed investigations are being done in other locations. The ecological and institutional analysis research framework, some preliminary findings and a few tentative conclusions are provided here as 'Part 1' in sharing project outputs. The project is expected to conclude in mid-2003, with further outputs to be reported at subsequent GCFI meetings.

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