In this article we investigate the possibility that a regulatory regime designed to maximize the profitability of the early Dutch whaling industry could have simultaneously guaranteed the biological sustainability of the eastern Arctic Bowhead whale. We find that policies with economic profit as the sole objective could have saved the whales, as well as increasing the incomes of the whalers, under assumptions commonly made in fisheries models. However, the necessary assumptions are implausible. Under more historically relevant assumptions we find that regulation could not have simultaneously increased profits and preserved the stock of whales
The continued removal of individuals from the depleted Bering Sea stock of bowhead whales (Balaena m...
Following the introduction of sea-going factory vessels by Norwegian whalers in the 1926 season, the...
signatories were whaling nations. Apart from some whaling by their indigenous people, none of the or...
In this article we investigate the possibility that a regulatory regime designed to maximize the pro...
In this article we investigate the possibility that a regulatory regime designed to maximize the pro...
The bowhead whale (Balaena mysticetus) was once widely distributed across the oceans and polar seas ...
There is now strong scientific evidence that several species of baleen whale and possibly the sperm ...
In the mid-1970s, the International Whaling Commission concluded that the increased harvest by Alask...
ABSTRACT. The continued removal of individuals from the depleted Bering Sea stock of bowhead whales ...
The International Whaling Commission (IWC) met in Reykjavik, Iceland, in May 1991 to determine wheth...
In this paper we argue that the bowhead whale stock resident off the east coast of Greenland was hun...
Whales capture the public\u27s imagination like no other wild animal. They have played a central rol...
This paper presents empirical evidence which indicates that the introduction of petroleum based prod...
ABSTRACT. One of the longest-living mammals, the Greenland whale or bowhead (Balaena mysticetus) is ...
In a splendid geographic setting, the Eskimo of western and northwestern Alaska have for centuries r...
The continued removal of individuals from the depleted Bering Sea stock of bowhead whales (Balaena m...
Following the introduction of sea-going factory vessels by Norwegian whalers in the 1926 season, the...
signatories were whaling nations. Apart from some whaling by their indigenous people, none of the or...
In this article we investigate the possibility that a regulatory regime designed to maximize the pro...
In this article we investigate the possibility that a regulatory regime designed to maximize the pro...
The bowhead whale (Balaena mysticetus) was once widely distributed across the oceans and polar seas ...
There is now strong scientific evidence that several species of baleen whale and possibly the sperm ...
In the mid-1970s, the International Whaling Commission concluded that the increased harvest by Alask...
ABSTRACT. The continued removal of individuals from the depleted Bering Sea stock of bowhead whales ...
The International Whaling Commission (IWC) met in Reykjavik, Iceland, in May 1991 to determine wheth...
In this paper we argue that the bowhead whale stock resident off the east coast of Greenland was hun...
Whales capture the public\u27s imagination like no other wild animal. They have played a central rol...
This paper presents empirical evidence which indicates that the introduction of petroleum based prod...
ABSTRACT. One of the longest-living mammals, the Greenland whale or bowhead (Balaena mysticetus) is ...
In a splendid geographic setting, the Eskimo of western and northwestern Alaska have for centuries r...
The continued removal of individuals from the depleted Bering Sea stock of bowhead whales (Balaena m...
Following the introduction of sea-going factory vessels by Norwegian whalers in the 1926 season, the...
signatories were whaling nations. Apart from some whaling by their indigenous people, none of the or...