This project examines the effect the International Whaling Commission has had on the Japanese Whaling Industry. Economic research into this field has been limited, and new analyses are needed considering Japan’s recent departure from the International Whaling Commission and resumption of commercial whaling. In particular, we seek to determine whether the 1986 moratorium banning commercial whaling has had a significant impact on the quantity of whales harvested by Japanese whaling vessels. Although this project did not find that the moratorium significantly impacted whale harvesting, there is a number of limitations to this research that suggest further study is required
After the controversial exit of Japan from the International Whaling Commission in December 2018, ma...
Scientific whaling in the Southern Ocean has been a topical issue through scientific, political, ec...
Normile reports on Japan\u27s expanded scientific whaling program and notes that Canada, the United...
This project examines the effect the International Whaling Commission has had on the Japanese Whalin...
2016 marks the 70th anniversary of the International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling (ICRW)...
Indigenous whaling is one of the whaling activities under the regulatory power of the International ...
This case study focuses on the global strategies adopted by the Japanese whaling industry in the mid...
This research is intended to explain the reasons for Japan's rejection of the anti-whaling norms. To...
After the commercial whaling moratorium was enacted in 1986, whale watching became one of the fastes...
Eighteen years after initiating scientific whaling in Antarctic waters, Japan presented a new and mo...
From pre-historic to modern times, whales remain an exploitable resource, though in recent decades t...
Japanese whaling practices have always sparked controversy among the international community. Japan\...
The International Whaling Commission (IWC) met in Reykjavik, Iceland, in May 1991 to determine wheth...
The aim of this research is to find out why Japan still continue their whaling program, even though ...
The purpose of the study was to identify if the scientific exemption clause of the international wh...
After the controversial exit of Japan from the International Whaling Commission in December 2018, ma...
Scientific whaling in the Southern Ocean has been a topical issue through scientific, political, ec...
Normile reports on Japan\u27s expanded scientific whaling program and notes that Canada, the United...
This project examines the effect the International Whaling Commission has had on the Japanese Whalin...
2016 marks the 70th anniversary of the International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling (ICRW)...
Indigenous whaling is one of the whaling activities under the regulatory power of the International ...
This case study focuses on the global strategies adopted by the Japanese whaling industry in the mid...
This research is intended to explain the reasons for Japan's rejection of the anti-whaling norms. To...
After the commercial whaling moratorium was enacted in 1986, whale watching became one of the fastes...
Eighteen years after initiating scientific whaling in Antarctic waters, Japan presented a new and mo...
From pre-historic to modern times, whales remain an exploitable resource, though in recent decades t...
Japanese whaling practices have always sparked controversy among the international community. Japan\...
The International Whaling Commission (IWC) met in Reykjavik, Iceland, in May 1991 to determine wheth...
The aim of this research is to find out why Japan still continue their whaling program, even though ...
The purpose of the study was to identify if the scientific exemption clause of the international wh...
After the controversial exit of Japan from the International Whaling Commission in December 2018, ma...
Scientific whaling in the Southern Ocean has been a topical issue through scientific, political, ec...
Normile reports on Japan\u27s expanded scientific whaling program and notes that Canada, the United...