Marine reserves can create both benefits and costs to fishers. This article explores the perceptions of fishers in Kenya and Seychelles about displacement, spillover, and overall impacts of local marine reserves on their livelihoods. We test whether these perceptions are different among fishers from different geographic and socioeconomic conditions. Sixty-six percent of fishers had been displaced from marine reserves or coastal development and 90% believed they had caught fishes that spilled over from marine reserves. Poorer fishers in Kenya were both displaced from, and also felt like they benefited from, marine reserves. This highlights how people's experiences with marine reserves, both positive and negative, are affected by a range of s...
Local ecological knowledge has filled baseline gaps in conservation biology, providing important inf...
Poverty and inequality remain a development challenge for most fishery-dependent households. This ha...
Local support is critical to the success and longevity of fishery management initiatives. Previous r...
Marine reserves can create both benefits and costs to fishers. This article explores the perceptions...
Two main drivers of global trends in noncompliance of marine protected areas regulations are food an...
1 This paper examines attitudes towards marine conservation among fishers from two villages in Kilif...
The socioeconomic conditions in nine communities of the Kenyan coast were examined to test the hypot...
Increasing the chances that resource users engage in and comply with management regulations is a con...
This paper examines attitudes towards marine conservation among fishers from two villages in Kilifi ...
Measuring the success or failure of natural resource management is a key challenge to evaluate the i...
Measuring the success or failure of natural resource management is a key challenge to evaluate the i...
This study was carried out in the districts Kilifi and Malindi. It focusses on the activities of a...
There are an estimated 8-10,000 artisanal fishers on the Kenya coast, about 2-3,000 ê the Kilifi and...
Fishers often behave in ways that were neither intended, nor anticipated, by managers or policy make...
Non-compliance with marine protected area (MPA) regulations is a problem worldwide, and this is bein...
Local ecological knowledge has filled baseline gaps in conservation biology, providing important inf...
Poverty and inequality remain a development challenge for most fishery-dependent households. This ha...
Local support is critical to the success and longevity of fishery management initiatives. Previous r...
Marine reserves can create both benefits and costs to fishers. This article explores the perceptions...
Two main drivers of global trends in noncompliance of marine protected areas regulations are food an...
1 This paper examines attitudes towards marine conservation among fishers from two villages in Kilif...
The socioeconomic conditions in nine communities of the Kenyan coast were examined to test the hypot...
Increasing the chances that resource users engage in and comply with management regulations is a con...
This paper examines attitudes towards marine conservation among fishers from two villages in Kilifi ...
Measuring the success or failure of natural resource management is a key challenge to evaluate the i...
Measuring the success or failure of natural resource management is a key challenge to evaluate the i...
This study was carried out in the districts Kilifi and Malindi. It focusses on the activities of a...
There are an estimated 8-10,000 artisanal fishers on the Kenya coast, about 2-3,000 ê the Kilifi and...
Fishers often behave in ways that were neither intended, nor anticipated, by managers or policy make...
Non-compliance with marine protected area (MPA) regulations is a problem worldwide, and this is bein...
Local ecological knowledge has filled baseline gaps in conservation biology, providing important inf...
Poverty and inequality remain a development challenge for most fishery-dependent households. This ha...
Local support is critical to the success and longevity of fishery management initiatives. Previous r...