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Something old, something new: Historical perspectives provide lessons for blue growth agendas. / Caswell, Bryony A.; Klein, Emily S.; Alleway, Heidi K.; Ball, Johnathan E.; Botero, Julián; Cardinale, Massimiliano; Eero, Margit; Engelhard, Georg H.; Fortibuoni, Tomaso; Giraldo, Ana Judith; Hentati-Sundberg, Jonas; Jones, Peter; Kittinger, John N.; Krause, Gesche; Lajus, Dmitry L.; Lajus, Julia; Lau, Sally C.Y.; Lescrauwaet, Ann Katrien; MacKenzie, Brian R.; McKenzie, Matthew; Ojaveer, Henn; Pandolfi, John M.; Raicevich, Saša; Russell, Bayden D.; Sundelöf, Andreas; Thorpe, Robert B.; zu Ermgassen, Philine S.E.; Thurstan, Ruth H.

In: Fish and Fisheries, Vol. 21, No. 4, 01.07.2020, p. 774-796.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Caswell, BA, Klein, ES, Alleway, HK, Ball, JE, Botero, J, Cardinale, M, Eero, M, Engelhard, GH, Fortibuoni, T, Giraldo, AJ, Hentati-Sundberg, J, Jones, P, Kittinger, JN, Krause, G, Lajus, DL, Lajus, J, Lau, SCY, Lescrauwaet, AK, MacKenzie, BR, McKenzie, M, Ojaveer, H, Pandolfi, JM, Raicevich, S, Russell, BD, Sundelöf, A, Thorpe, RB, zu Ermgassen, PSE & Thurstan, RH 2020, 'Something old, something new: Historical perspectives provide lessons for blue growth agendas', Fish and Fisheries, vol. 21, no. 4, pp. 774-796. https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12460

APA

Caswell, B. A., Klein, E. S., Alleway, H. K., Ball, J. E., Botero, J., Cardinale, M., Eero, M., Engelhard, G. H., Fortibuoni, T., Giraldo, A. J., Hentati-Sundberg, J., Jones, P., Kittinger, J. N., Krause, G., Lajus, D. L., Lajus, J., Lau, S. C. Y., Lescrauwaet, A. K., MacKenzie, B. R., ... Thurstan, R. H. (2020). Something old, something new: Historical perspectives provide lessons for blue growth agendas. Fish and Fisheries, 21(4), 774-796. https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12460

Vancouver

Caswell BA, Klein ES, Alleway HK, Ball JE, Botero J, Cardinale M et al. Something old, something new: Historical perspectives provide lessons for blue growth agendas. Fish and Fisheries. 2020 Jul 1;21(4):774-796. https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12460

Author

Caswell, Bryony A. ; Klein, Emily S. ; Alleway, Heidi K. ; Ball, Johnathan E. ; Botero, Julián ; Cardinale, Massimiliano ; Eero, Margit ; Engelhard, Georg H. ; Fortibuoni, Tomaso ; Giraldo, Ana Judith ; Hentati-Sundberg, Jonas ; Jones, Peter ; Kittinger, John N. ; Krause, Gesche ; Lajus, Dmitry L. ; Lajus, Julia ; Lau, Sally C.Y. ; Lescrauwaet, Ann Katrien ; MacKenzie, Brian R. ; McKenzie, Matthew ; Ojaveer, Henn ; Pandolfi, John M. ; Raicevich, Saša ; Russell, Bayden D. ; Sundelöf, Andreas ; Thorpe, Robert B. ; zu Ermgassen, Philine S.E. ; Thurstan, Ruth H. / Something old, something new: Historical perspectives provide lessons for blue growth agendas. In: Fish and Fisheries. 2020 ; Vol. 21, No. 4. pp. 774-796.

BibTeX

@article{08e49b381a0046eaa920bc9e1267d646,
title = "Something old, something new: Historical perspectives provide lessons for blue growth agendas",
abstract = "The concept of “blue growth,” which aims to promote the growth of ocean economies while holistically managing marine socioecological systems, is emerging within national and international marine policy. The concept is often promoted as being novel; however, we show that historical analogies exist that can provide insights for contemporary planning and implementation of blue growth. Using a case-study approach based on expert knowledge, we identified 20 historical fisheries or aquaculture examples from 13 countries, spanning the last 40–800 years, that we contend embody blue growth concepts. This is the first time, to our knowledge, that blue growth has been investigated across such broad spatial and temporal scales. The past societies managed to balance exploitation with equitable access, ecological integrity and/or economic growth for varying periods of time. Four main trajectories existed that led to the success or failure of blue growth. Success was linked to equitable rather than open access, innovation and management that was responsive, holistic and based on scientific knowledge and monitoring. The inability to achieve or maintain blue growth resulted from failures to address limits to industry growth and/or anticipate the impacts of adverse extrinsic events and drivers (e.g. changes in international markets, war), the prioritization of short-term gains over long-term sustainability, and loss of supporting systems. Fourteen cross-cutting lessons and 10 recommendations were derived that can improve understanding and implementation of blue growth. Despite the contemporary literature broadly supporting our findings, these recommendations are not adequately addressed by agendas seeking to realize blue growth.",
keywords = "ecosystem services, environmental history, fisheries, historical ecology, marine policy, sustainable development",
author = "Caswell, {Bryony A.} and Klein, {Emily S.} and Alleway, {Heidi K.} and Ball, {Johnathan E.} and Juli{\'a}n Botero and Massimiliano Cardinale and Margit Eero and Engelhard, {Georg H.} and Tomaso Fortibuoni and Giraldo, {Ana Judith} and Jonas Hentati-Sundberg and Peter Jones and Kittinger, {John N.} and Gesche Krause and Lajus, {Dmitry L.} and Julia Lajus and Lau, {Sally C.Y.} and Lescrauwaet, {Ann Katrien} and MacKenzie, {Brian R.} and Matthew McKenzie and Henn Ojaveer and Pandolfi, {John M.} and Sa{\v s}a Raicevich and Russell, {Bayden D.} and Andreas Sundel{\"o}f and Thorpe, {Robert B.} and {zu Ermgassen}, {Philine S.E.} and Thurstan, {Ruth H.}",
note = "H2020 Marie Sk{\l}odowska-Curie Actions, Grant/Award Number: 787671; European Cooperation in Science and Technology, Grant/Award Number: IS1403; Griffith University; University of Strathclyde; Russian Science Foundation, Grant/Award Number: 19-14-00092",
year = "2020",
month = jul,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/faf.12460",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "774--796",
journal = "Fish and Fisheries",
issn = "1467-2960",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Something old, something new: Historical perspectives provide lessons for blue growth agendas

AU - Caswell, Bryony A.

AU - Klein, Emily S.

AU - Alleway, Heidi K.

AU - Ball, Johnathan E.

AU - Botero, Julián

AU - Cardinale, Massimiliano

AU - Eero, Margit

AU - Engelhard, Georg H.

AU - Fortibuoni, Tomaso

AU - Giraldo, Ana Judith

AU - Hentati-Sundberg, Jonas

AU - Jones, Peter

AU - Kittinger, John N.

AU - Krause, Gesche

AU - Lajus, Dmitry L.

AU - Lajus, Julia

AU - Lau, Sally C.Y.

AU - Lescrauwaet, Ann Katrien

AU - MacKenzie, Brian R.

AU - McKenzie, Matthew

AU - Ojaveer, Henn

AU - Pandolfi, John M.

AU - Raicevich, Saša

AU - Russell, Bayden D.

AU - Sundelöf, Andreas

AU - Thorpe, Robert B.

AU - zu Ermgassen, Philine S.E.

AU - Thurstan, Ruth H.

N1 - H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions, Grant/Award Number: 787671; European Cooperation in Science and Technology, Grant/Award Number: IS1403; Griffith University; University of Strathclyde; Russian Science Foundation, Grant/Award Number: 19-14-00092

PY - 2020/7/1

Y1 - 2020/7/1

N2 - The concept of “blue growth,” which aims to promote the growth of ocean economies while holistically managing marine socioecological systems, is emerging within national and international marine policy. The concept is often promoted as being novel; however, we show that historical analogies exist that can provide insights for contemporary planning and implementation of blue growth. Using a case-study approach based on expert knowledge, we identified 20 historical fisheries or aquaculture examples from 13 countries, spanning the last 40–800 years, that we contend embody blue growth concepts. This is the first time, to our knowledge, that blue growth has been investigated across such broad spatial and temporal scales. The past societies managed to balance exploitation with equitable access, ecological integrity and/or economic growth for varying periods of time. Four main trajectories existed that led to the success or failure of blue growth. Success was linked to equitable rather than open access, innovation and management that was responsive, holistic and based on scientific knowledge and monitoring. The inability to achieve or maintain blue growth resulted from failures to address limits to industry growth and/or anticipate the impacts of adverse extrinsic events and drivers (e.g. changes in international markets, war), the prioritization of short-term gains over long-term sustainability, and loss of supporting systems. Fourteen cross-cutting lessons and 10 recommendations were derived that can improve understanding and implementation of blue growth. Despite the contemporary literature broadly supporting our findings, these recommendations are not adequately addressed by agendas seeking to realize blue growth.

AB - The concept of “blue growth,” which aims to promote the growth of ocean economies while holistically managing marine socioecological systems, is emerging within national and international marine policy. The concept is often promoted as being novel; however, we show that historical analogies exist that can provide insights for contemporary planning and implementation of blue growth. Using a case-study approach based on expert knowledge, we identified 20 historical fisheries or aquaculture examples from 13 countries, spanning the last 40–800 years, that we contend embody blue growth concepts. This is the first time, to our knowledge, that blue growth has been investigated across such broad spatial and temporal scales. The past societies managed to balance exploitation with equitable access, ecological integrity and/or economic growth for varying periods of time. Four main trajectories existed that led to the success or failure of blue growth. Success was linked to equitable rather than open access, innovation and management that was responsive, holistic and based on scientific knowledge and monitoring. The inability to achieve or maintain blue growth resulted from failures to address limits to industry growth and/or anticipate the impacts of adverse extrinsic events and drivers (e.g. changes in international markets, war), the prioritization of short-term gains over long-term sustainability, and loss of supporting systems. Fourteen cross-cutting lessons and 10 recommendations were derived that can improve understanding and implementation of blue growth. Despite the contemporary literature broadly supporting our findings, these recommendations are not adequately addressed by agendas seeking to realize blue growth.

KW - ecosystem services

KW - environmental history

KW - fisheries

KW - historical ecology

KW - marine policy

KW - sustainable development

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85082923138&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1111/faf.12460

DO - 10.1111/faf.12460

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85082923138

VL - 21

SP - 774

EP - 796

JO - Fish and Fisheries

JF - Fish and Fisheries

SN - 1467-2960

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 70534731