Skip to main content

Advertisement

Log in

Customary Sea Tenure in Oceania as a Case of Rights-based Fishery Management: Does it Work?

  • Special Segment: Rights Based Fisheries
  • Published:
Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

This paper outlines the general characteristics of customary sea tenure (CST) in Oceania and identifies areas in which these characteristics overlap with modern rights-based fisheries management systems such as ITQs and CDQs. It also examines the effectiveness of CST regimes at regulating marine resource use and access by focusing on a particular case from the Solomon Islands. The institutional robustness or vulnerability of CST is assessed by examining various performance criteria for two communities in the Roviana Lagoon, Western Solomons. These criteria include people’s (1) settlement patterns in relation to their property, (2) cultural consensus, (3) cultural attitudes with regard to governance and management, and (4) fishing efforts and yields. The results show that a number of historical processes have shaped CST systems into heterogeneous and dynamic institutions, and that CST regimes can vary even on small geographical scales. Understanding the circumstances in which CST regimes are more likely to be successful has facilitated the design and implementation of co-management fishery prescriptions (MPAs) for protecting particular species and habitats in the region. More generally, the paper proposes that by discerning the effectiveness of local governance institutions at regulating resource use and access – taking into consideration that these are embedded in particular historical and political contexts – we can better predict whether or not an introduced fishery management system will work. This knowledge can also assist in designing hybrid management schemes that cross-fertilize community-based management, modern rights-based fishery management (e.g., ITQs and CDQs), and other government regulations. This integration is particularly relevant when these policies are to be implemented in coastal communities that have or have had traditional rights-based fishery management systems of their own and/or are more socio-culturally homogeneous. Given the long history of failed fishery management, it is now of vital importance to design innovative fishery management prescriptions that integrate natural and social science research more comprehensively.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • J.M. Acheson (2003) Capturing the Commons: Devising Institutions to Manage the Maine Lobster Industry University Press of New England Layfayette, NH 320

    Google Scholar 

  • J.M. Acheson R. Gardner (2004) ArticleTitleStrategies, conflict, and the emergence of territoriality: the case of the Maine lobster industry Am. Anthropol. 106 296–307 Occurrence Handle10.1525/aa.2004.106.2.296

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • J.M. Acheson J.A. Wilson (1996) ArticleTitleOrder out of chaos: the case for parametric fisheries management Am. Anthropol. 98 579–594

    Google Scholar 

  • T.J. Adams (1998) ArticleTitleThe interface between traditional and modern methods of fishery management in the Pacific Islands Ocea. Coast. Man. 40 127–142

    Google Scholar 

  • T.J. Adams P. Dalzell S. Roberts (1997) South Pacific Commission and Forum Agency Workshop on the Management of South Pacific Inshore Fisheries South Pacific Commission Noumea

    Google Scholar 

  • T. Akimichi (1978) ArticleTitleThe ecological aspect of Lau (Solomon Islands) ethnoichthyology J. Polynes. Soc. 87 301–326

    Google Scholar 

  • E.H. Allison (2001) ArticleTitleBig laws, small catches: global ocean governance and the fisheries crisis J. Int. Dev. 13 933–950 Occurrence Handle10.1002/jid.834

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • S. Aswani (1997) ArticleTitleTroubled waters in South-western New Georgia, Solomon Islands. Is codification of the commons a viable avenue for resource use regularisation? Trad. Mar. Res. Man. Know. Infor. Bull. 8 2–16

    Google Scholar 

  • S. Aswani (1998) ArticleTitlePatterns of marine harvest effort in SW New Georgia, Solomon Islands: Resource management or optimal foraging? Ocea. Coast. Manage. 40 207–235

    Google Scholar 

  • S. Aswani (1999) ArticleTitleCommon property models of sea tenure: a case study from Roviana and Vonavona Lagoons, New Georgia, Solomon Islands Hum. Ecol. 27 417–453 Occurrence Handle10.1023/A:1018727607651

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • S. Aswani (2000) ArticleTitleChanging identities: the ethnohistory of Roviana predatory headhunting Jour. Polynes. Soc. 109 39–70

    Google Scholar 

  • S. Aswani (2002) ArticleTitleAssessing the effect of changing demographic and consumption patterns on sea tenure regimes in the Roviana Lagoon, Solomon Islands Ambio 31 272–284 Occurrence Handle12174597

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • S. Aswani P. Sheppard (2003) ArticleTitleThe archaeology and ethnohistory of exchange in pre-colonial and colonial Roviana: gift, commodities, and inalienable possessions Curr. Anthro. 44 51–78

    Google Scholar 

  • S. Aswani R. Hamilton (2004a) ArticleTitleIntegrating indigenous ecological knowledge and customary sea tenure with marine and social science for conservation of bumphead parrotfish (Bolbometopon muricatum) in the Roviana Lagoon, Solomon Islands Environ. Conser. 31 69–83

    Google Scholar 

  • S. Aswani R. Hamilton (2004b) ArticleTitleThe value of many small vs. few large marine protected areas in the Western Solomons Trad. Mar. Res. Man. Know. Infor. Bull 16 3–14

    Google Scholar 

  • S. Aswani P. Weiant (2004) ArticleTitleScientific evaluation in women’s participatory management: monitoring marine invertebrate refugia in the Solomon Islands Hum. Org. 63 301–319

    Google Scholar 

  • S. Aswani M. Lauer P. Weiant L. Geelen S. Herman (2004) The Roviana and Vonavona Marine Resource Management Project. Final Report 2000–2004 Department of Anthropology, University of California Santa Barbara, CA

    Google Scholar 

  • F. Berkes (1985) ArticleTitleFishermen and “The tragedy of the commons” Environ. Conser. 12 199–206

    Google Scholar 

  • H.R. Bernard (2000) Handbook of Methods in Cultural Anthropology Altamira Press Walnut Creek, CA 814

    Google Scholar 

  • H.R. Bernard (2002) Research Methods in Anthropology: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches Altamira Press Walnut Creek, CA

    Google Scholar 

  • R. Bess (2001) ArticleTitleNew Zealand’s indigenous people and their claims to fisheries resources Mar. Poli. 25 23–32

    Google Scholar 

  • D.W. Bromley (1992) ArticleTitleThe commons, common property, and environmental policy Environ. Res. Econ. 2 1–17

    Google Scholar 

  • M.J. Casimir (1992) The dimensions of territoriality: an introduction M. Casimir A. Rao (Eds) Mobility and Territoriality. Social and Spatial Boundaries among Foragers, Fishers, Pastoralists, and Peripatetics St. Martin’s Press New York 1–26

    Google Scholar 

  • J.C. Castilla O. Defeo (2001) ArticleTitleLatin-American benthic shellfisheries: emphasis on co-management and experimental practices Rev. Fish Biol. Fisher. 11 1–30

    Google Scholar 

  • M. Chapman (1985) ArticleTitleEnvironmental influences on the development of traditional conservation in the South Pacific region Environ. Conser. 12 217–230

    Google Scholar 

  • F.T. Christy (1982) Territorial Use Rights in Marine Fisheries: Problems and Definitions FAO Rome,

    Google Scholar 

  • F.T. Christy (1996) ArticleTitleThe death rattle of open access and the advent of property rights regimes in fisheries Mar. Res. Eco. 11 287–304

    Google Scholar 

  • P. Christie B. McCay M.L. Miller C. Lowe A.T. White R. Stoffle D.L. Fluharty L.T. McManus R. Chuenpagdee C. Pomeroy D.O. Suman B.G. Blount D. Huppert R.V. Eisma E. Oracion K. Lowry R.B. Pollnac (2003) ArticleTitleToward developing a complete understanding: a social science research agenda for marine protected areas Fisheries 28 22–26

    Google Scholar 

  • Cinner, J. (2005) Socioeconomic factors influencing customary marine tenure in the Indo-Pacific. Eco. Soc. 10, 36 [online from URL: http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/viewarticle. php?id=1364].

  • S.V. Ciriacy-Wantrup R.C. Bishop (1975) ArticleTitle“Common property” as a concept in natural resource policy Nat. Res. J. 15 713–727

    Google Scholar 

  • A.J. Cooke N.V.C. Polunin K. Moce (2000) ArticleTitleComparative assessments of stakeholder management in traditional Fijian fishing grounds Environ. Conser. 27 291–299

    Google Scholar 

  • Cordell J. (1989) Sea tenure. In: Cordell J. (ed.), A Sea of Small Boats Cultural Survival Report No. 26., Cambridge.

  • R. D’Andrade (1995) The Development of Cognitive Anthropology Cambridge University Press Cambridge, UK 272

    Google Scholar 

  • C. Dahl (1988) ArticleTitleTraditional marine tenure: a basis for artisanal fisheries management Mar. Pol. 12 40–48

    Google Scholar 

  • T. Dietz E. Ostrom P.C. Stern (2003) ArticleTitleThe struggle to govern the commons Science 302 1907–1912 Occurrence Handle10.1126/science.1091015 Occurrence Handle1:CAS:528:DC%2BD3sXps1amsLk%3D Occurrence Handle14671286

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • E.P. Durrenberger G. Palsson (1987) ArticleTitleOwnership at sea: fishing territories and access to sea resources Am. Ethnol. 14 508–522 Occurrence Handle10.1525/ae.1987.14.3.02a00060

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • R. Dyson-Hudson E.A. Smith (1978) ArticleTitleHuman territoriality: an ecological reassessment Am. Anthropol. 80 24–41 Occurrence Handle10.1525/aa.1978.80.1.02a00020

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • K. Foster J. Poggie (1993) ArticleTitleCustomary marine tenure and mariculture management in outlying communities of Pohnpei State, Federated States of Micronesia Ocea. Coast. Man. 20 1–21

    Google Scholar 

  • T. Graham N. Idechong (1998) ArticleTitleReconciling customary and constitutional law: managing marine resources in Palau, Micronesia Ocea. Coast Man. 40 143–164

    Google Scholar 

  • S. Hanna (1996) Social and economic path dependence in the construction of market-based fishery programs G. Palsson G. Petursdottir (Eds) Social Implications of Quota Systems in Fisheries Nordic Council Copenhagen 133–146

    Google Scholar 

  • R. Hannesson (1991) ArticleTitleFrom common fish to rights based fishing Euro. Econ. Rev. 35 397–407

    Google Scholar 

  • D. Holland N. Quinn (Eds) (1987) Cultural Models in Language and Thought Cambridge University Press Cambridge 400

    Google Scholar 

  • E. Hviding (1989) All Things in Our Sea: the Dynamics of Customary Marine Tenure, Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands PNG, National Research Institute Boroko

    Google Scholar 

  • E. Hviding (1996) Guardians of Marovo Lagoon: Practice, Place, and Politics in Maritime Melanesia University of Hawaii Press Honolulu, HI

    Google Scholar 

  • D. Hyndman (1993) ArticleTitleSea tenure and the management of living marine resources in Papua New Guinea Pac. Stud. 16 99–114

    Google Scholar 

  • S. Jentoft B.J. McCay D.C. Wilson (1998) ArticleTitleSocial theory and fisheries co-management Mar. Poli. 22 423–436

    Google Scholar 

  • R.E. Johannes (1978) ArticleTitleTraditional marine conservation in Oceania and their demise Annu. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 9 349–364 Occurrence Handle10.1146/annurev.es.09.110178.002025

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • R.E. Johannes (1981) Words of the Lagoon. Fishing and Marine Lore in the Palau District of Micronesia University of California Press Berkeley, CA 245

    Google Scholar 

  • R.E. Johannes (1998) ArticleTitleThe case for data-less marine resource management: example from tropical nearshore finfisheries Trends Ecol. Evol. 13 243–246 Occurrence Handle10.1016/S0169-5347(98)01384-6

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • R.E. Johannes (2002) ArticleTitleThe renaissance of community-based marine resource management in Oceania Annu. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 33 317–340 Occurrence Handle10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.33.010802.150524

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • G. Leiva J.C. Castilla (2002) ArticleTitleA review of the world gastropod fishery: evolution of catches, management and the Chilean experience Rev. Fish Biol. Fisher. 11 283–300

    Google Scholar 

  • H.B. Levine (1983) ArticleTitleControlling access: forms of “territoriality” in three New Zealand crayfishing villages Ethnology 23 89–100

    Google Scholar 

  • P.M. Mace (1993) ArticleTitleWill private owners practice prudent resource management? Fisheries 18 29–31

    Google Scholar 

  • D.G. Maloney P.H. Pearse (1979) ArticleTitleQuantitative rights as an instrument for regulating commercial fisheries J. Fish. Res. Boa. Can. 36 859–866

    Google Scholar 

  • E. Mantjoro T. Akimichi (1996) ArticleTitleSea tenure and its transformation in the Sangihe Islands of North Sulawesi, Indonesia: the seke purse-seine fishery Senri Ethno. Stud. 42 121–146

    Google Scholar 

  • M.B. Mascia (2003) ArticleTitleThe human dimension of coral reef marine protected areas: recent social science research and its policy implications Conserv. Biol. 17 630–632

    Google Scholar 

  • B.J. McCay (1995) ArticleTitleSocial and ecological implications of ITQs: an overview Ocea. Coast. Man. 28 3–22

    Google Scholar 

  • National Census (1999) Report on 1999 Population and Housing Census. Solomon Islands Government, Honiara, Statistics Office.

  • B. Nietschmann (1985) Torres Strait islanders sea resource management and sea rights K. Ruddle R.E. Johannes (Eds) The Traditional Knowledge and Management of Coastal Systems in Asia and the Pacific UNESCO Jakarta 125–156

    Google Scholar 

  • M. Orbach (1996) Social science in the coastal zone J. Taussik J. Mitchell (Eds) Partnership in Coastal Zone Management, Proceedings of LITTORAL ’96, the Third International Conference of the European Coastal Association for Science and Technology Samara Publishing Limited Cardigan, UK 45–54

    Google Scholar 

  • E. Ostrom (1990) Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action Cambridge University Press Cambridge, UK 280

    Google Scholar 

  • G. Palsson A. Helgason (1995) ArticleTitleFiguring fish and measuring men: the individual transferable quota system in the Icelandic cod fishery Ocea. Coast. Man. 28 117–146

    Google Scholar 

  • Peterson, N. and Rigsby, B. (eds.) (1998) Customary Marine Tenure in Australia. Oceania Monograph 48. Sydney, Australia.

  • E. Pinkerton (1989) Co-operative Management of Local Fisheries New Directions for Improved Management and Community Development University of British Columbia Press Vancouver, BC 312

    Google Scholar 

  • R.B. Pollnac (1984) Investigating territorial use rights among fishermen K. Ruddle T. Akimichi (Eds) Maritime Institutions in the Western Pacific National Museum of Ethnology Osaka

    Google Scholar 

  • N. Polunin (1984) Do traditional “reserves” conserve? A view of Indonesia and New Guinean Evidence K. Ruddle T. Akimichi (Eds) Maritime Institutions in the Western Pacific National Museum of Ethnology Osaka

    Google Scholar 

  • K. Ruddle (1988) ArticleTitleSocial principles underlying traditional inshore fisheries management systems in the Pacific basin Mar. Res. Econ. 5 351–363

    Google Scholar 

  • K. Ruddle (1996) Traditional management of reef fishing N.V.C. Polunin C.M. Roberts (Eds) Reef Fisheries Chapman and Hall London 315–335

    Google Scholar 

  • K. Ruddle (1998) ArticleTitleThe context of policy design for existing community-based fisheries management systems in the Pacific Islands Ocea. Coast. Manage. 40 105–126

    Google Scholar 

  • K. Ruddle T. Akimichi (1984) Sea tenure in Japan and the southwestern Ryukyus J.C. Cordell (Eds) A Sea of Small Boats: Customary Law and Territoriality in the World of Inshore Fishing Stanford University Press Stanford

    Google Scholar 

  • L.M. Ruttan (1998) ArticleTitleClosing the commons: cooperation for gain or restraint? Hum. Ecol. 26 43–66 Occurrence Handle10.1023/A:1018744816814

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • D.K. Schreiber (2001) ArticleTitleCo-management without involvement: the plight of fishing communities Fish Fisher. 2 376–384

    Google Scholar 

  • Shotton, R. (2000) Current property rights systems in fisheries management. In: Shotton, R. (ed.), Use of Property Rights in Fisheries Management. Proceedings of the FishRights99 Conference, Fremantle, Western Australia.

  • A. Smith (1991) ArticleTitleTraditional and the development of the marine resources and coastal management plan for Yap State, Federated States of Micronesia Res. Man. Opt. 18 155–156

    Google Scholar 

  • R.L. Stanton J.D. Bell (1969) Volcanic and Associated Rocks of the New Georgia Group, British Solomon Islands Protectorate Her Majesty’s Stationary Office London

    Google Scholar 

  • T.A. Steelman R.L. Wallace (2001) ArticleTitleProperty rights and property wrongs: why context matters in fisheries management Pol. Sci. 34 357–379

    Google Scholar 

  • G.G. Stevenson (1991) Common Property Economics: A General Theory and Land Use Applications Cambridge University Press Cambridge

    Google Scholar 

  • D.R. Stoddart (1969) ArticleTitleGeomorphology of the Marovo Lagoon elevated barrier reefs, New Georgia Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. B 255 388–402

    Google Scholar 

  • K. Sudo (1984) Social organization and types of sea tenure in Micronesia K. Ruddle T. Akimichi (Eds) Maritime Institutions in the Western Pacific National Museum of Ethnology Osaka

    Google Scholar 

  • P. Taurakoto (1984) Customary rights to reefs and landings P. Larmour (Eds) Land Tenure in Vanuatu University of the South Pacific Suva, Fiji

    Google Scholar 

  • Toloa, F., Gillet, R. and Pelasio, M. (1991) Traditional marine conservation in Tokelau. Can it be adapted to meet today’s situation. Paper presented at the 23rd SPC Regional Technical Meeting on Fisheries, Noumea, New Caledonia.

  • F.R. Thomas (2001) ArticleTitleRemodeling marine tenure on the atolls: a case study from Western Kiribati, Micronesia Hum. Ecol. 29 399–423 Occurrence Handle10.1023/A:1013141804349

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • J. Wagner A. Davis (2004) ArticleTitleProperty as social relations: Rights of “kindness” and the social organization of lobster fishing among northeast Nova Scotian Scottish Gaels Hum. Org. 62 320–333

    Google Scholar 

  • M.D. Young B.J. McCay (1995) Building equity, stewardship, and resilience into market-based property rights systems S. Hanna M. Munasinghe (Eds) Property Rights and the Environment: Social and Ecological Issues The World Bank Washington, DC 87–102

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Shankar Aswani.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Aswani, S. Customary Sea Tenure in Oceania as a Case of Rights-based Fishery Management: Does it Work?. Rev Fish Biol Fisheries 15, 285–307 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11160-005-4868-x

Download citation

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11160-005-4868-x

Keywords

Navigation