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Cumulative effects, creeping enclosure, and the marine commons of New Jersey Cover

Cumulative effects, creeping enclosure, and the marine commons of New Jersey

Open Access
|Feb 2010

Abstract

In response to declining fish stocks and increased societal concern, the marine ‘commons’ of New Jersey is no longer freely available to commercial and recreational fisheries. We discuss the concept of ‘creeping’ enclosure in relation to New Jersey’s marine fisheries and suggest that reduced access can be a cumulative process and function of multiple events and processes and need not be the result of a single regulatory moment. We begin with a short review of the ‘expected’ effects of enclosure, including loss of flexibility, erosion of community, proletarianization of fishermen, and corporatization of the fishery. We then present some findings of our research and discuss how the signs of enclosure are visible in fisheries that do not feature explicitly privatized property or access rights. We rely on an oral history approach and the rich detail that emerges from attention to the lived experiences of fish harvesters to provide a framework for understanding the range of cumulative effects that have resulted from this process of creeping enclosure. We conclude with a discussion of how the gradual process of enclosure has affected the flows of information between the bio-physical environment and fish harvesters, managers and scientists by reducing both participation in fisheries and the accumulation of knowledge itself.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.18352/ijc.148 | Journal eISSN: 1875-0281
Language: English
Published on: Feb 4, 2010
Published by: Igitur, Utrecht Publishing & Archiving Services for IASC
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2010 Grant Murray, Teresa Johnson, Bonnie J. McCay, Mike Danko, Kevin St. Martin, Satsuki Takahashi, published by Igitur, Utrecht Publishing & Archiving Services for IASC
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.