Using data from the Mid-Atlantic surf clam and ocean quahog fishery, we find that firms with a preference for extreme, rather than moderate, policies are much more likely to participate in public meetings where regulation is determined. We also find that participation rates are higher for larger, closer, and more influential firms. These results: (1) improve our understanding of a very common institution for resource allocation, “meetings with costly participation”, (2) they refine our intuition about regulatory capture, (3) they provide broad confirmation of the recent theoretical literature predicting that polarization and bipartisanship should emerge under a variety of democratic institutions, and finally, (4) they may help to explain ma...
A two-stage model of interactions within Regional Fishery Management Councils was developed in which...
We study a collective decision-making process in which people interested in an issue may participate...
Democratic governance of natural resources requires democratic accountability. To explore the ante- ...
Using data from the Mid-Atlantic surf clam and ocean quahog fishery, we find that firms with a prefe...
Using data from the Mid-Atlantic surf clam and ocean quahog fishery, we find that firms with a prefe...
Insufficient and unrepresentative participation in voluntary public hearings and policy discussions ...
Voluntary participation has troubled policy makers since Aristotle\u27s time. Its perceived benefits...
This dissertation combines the features of a regulated common pool resource (CPR) and the political ...
The failure of modern fisheries management is blamed on myriad socio-economic and technical problems...
We study a collective decision-making process in which people interested in an issue may participate...
The objective of this paper is to illustrate that economic institutions matter, i.e., that different...
States have established regional fisheries management organizations (RFMOs) to manage transboundary ...
Suggested Bibliographic Reference: Challenging New Frontiers in the Global Seafood Sector: Proceedin...
Management of many global marine fisheries have faltered under science-based government-sponsored ma...
Public participation in the decision-making process is a key element of good governance. In its late...
A two-stage model of interactions within Regional Fishery Management Councils was developed in which...
We study a collective decision-making process in which people interested in an issue may participate...
Democratic governance of natural resources requires democratic accountability. To explore the ante- ...
Using data from the Mid-Atlantic surf clam and ocean quahog fishery, we find that firms with a prefe...
Using data from the Mid-Atlantic surf clam and ocean quahog fishery, we find that firms with a prefe...
Insufficient and unrepresentative participation in voluntary public hearings and policy discussions ...
Voluntary participation has troubled policy makers since Aristotle\u27s time. Its perceived benefits...
This dissertation combines the features of a regulated common pool resource (CPR) and the political ...
The failure of modern fisheries management is blamed on myriad socio-economic and technical problems...
We study a collective decision-making process in which people interested in an issue may participate...
The objective of this paper is to illustrate that economic institutions matter, i.e., that different...
States have established regional fisheries management organizations (RFMOs) to manage transboundary ...
Suggested Bibliographic Reference: Challenging New Frontiers in the Global Seafood Sector: Proceedin...
Management of many global marine fisheries have faltered under science-based government-sponsored ma...
Public participation in the decision-making process is a key element of good governance. In its late...
A two-stage model of interactions within Regional Fishery Management Councils was developed in which...
We study a collective decision-making process in which people interested in an issue may participate...
Democratic governance of natural resources requires democratic accountability. To explore the ante- ...