Part II of this Article surveys the challenges of marine conservation, the failures of existing regulatory regimes, and the potential for property rights in marine resources. Part III discusses the nature of private ordering, providing examples that arise from the fisheries context. Part IV discusses how legal rules can inhibit private ordering. That section focuses in particular on how antitrust law has impeded cooperative fishery management. Part V then explores possibilities for overcoming antitrust obstacles to private ordering. This Article concludes with some broader thoughts about the implications of this research for resource conservation
The alleged purpose of antitrust law is to improve consumer welfare by proscribing actions and arran...
Many fisheries management agencies struggle with developing management frameworks that can deliver s...
This Article reviews the changes already made or envisaged in light of the relevant provisions of th...
In Douglas v. Seacoast Products, Inc., the United States Supreme Court seemingly laid to rest any li...
This Article will discuss several of the proposed solutions to the problem of how the distribution o...
Antitrust law aims to protect consumers from anti-competitive conduct that can restrict output and i...
The world’s press regularly carries warnings that over-fishing is emptying the seas of their most im...
Property rights affect how people use resources. Enforcement regimes are able to set clear laws with...
Since the passage of Public Law 94-265 - the Fishery Conservation and Management Act of 1976 - ther...
This dissertation addresses the impact of environmental regulation on resource-based industries by a...
Seventy percent of the world\u27s fish populations are in serious decline; some have been fished to ...
This Article examines the conflict between the proposed extension of resource fishery zones and its ...
This article is devoted to an analysis of how these new management tools can be used most effectivel...
Abstract. Among the questions that ecosystem-based management raises for economists is how to partit...
Political controversies associated with individual fishing quota (“IFQ”) programs have impaired IFQ ...
The alleged purpose of antitrust law is to improve consumer welfare by proscribing actions and arran...
Many fisheries management agencies struggle with developing management frameworks that can deliver s...
This Article reviews the changes already made or envisaged in light of the relevant provisions of th...
In Douglas v. Seacoast Products, Inc., the United States Supreme Court seemingly laid to rest any li...
This Article will discuss several of the proposed solutions to the problem of how the distribution o...
Antitrust law aims to protect consumers from anti-competitive conduct that can restrict output and i...
The world’s press regularly carries warnings that over-fishing is emptying the seas of their most im...
Property rights affect how people use resources. Enforcement regimes are able to set clear laws with...
Since the passage of Public Law 94-265 - the Fishery Conservation and Management Act of 1976 - ther...
This dissertation addresses the impact of environmental regulation on resource-based industries by a...
Seventy percent of the world\u27s fish populations are in serious decline; some have been fished to ...
This Article examines the conflict between the proposed extension of resource fishery zones and its ...
This article is devoted to an analysis of how these new management tools can be used most effectivel...
Abstract. Among the questions that ecosystem-based management raises for economists is how to partit...
Political controversies associated with individual fishing quota (“IFQ”) programs have impaired IFQ ...
The alleged purpose of antitrust law is to improve consumer welfare by proscribing actions and arran...
Many fisheries management agencies struggle with developing management frameworks that can deliver s...
This Article reviews the changes already made or envisaged in light of the relevant provisions of th...