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Fishing-Dependent Communities on the Gulf Coast of Florida
Their Identification, Recent Decline and Present Resilience
Institution: | University of South Florida - Tampa, FL |
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Advisor(s): | Alvin W. Wolfe, Ph.D., Susan D. Greenbaum, Ph.D., Kevin A. Yelvington, Ph.D. |
Degree: | MA |
Year: | 2004 |
Volume: | 164 pages |
ISBN-10: | 1581122128 |
ISBN-13: | 9781581122121 |
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U.S. fisheries legislation requires National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) to attend to the critical social and economic issues surrounding the definition and
identification of fishing communities, and to the effects that changes to the physical
environment and regulatory decisions can have on such communities. To fulfil their mandate,
National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) sponsored the research entitled Identifying Fishing
Communities in the Gulf of Mexico to study the economic, social and cultural status of
potential fishing communities along the Gulf of Mexico.
NMFS contracted the research project to Impact Assessment, Inc. to study 80 plus potential
fishing communities in the Florida Gulf Coast. I worked as an intern in the research and
visited the communities with other team members. The task of our project was to provide NMFS
with basic profiles of fishing communities for NMFS to develop a culturally appropriated
intervention. Research methods include Rapid Assessment Procedures (RAP), semi-structured key
informant interviews, participant observation, and archival and secondary research mainly for
community histories.
Apart from my internship research, I also conducted some additional interviews and
observations for my thesis. My findings indicate that fishing communities along the Florida
Gulf Coast encounter with challenge from increased regulation, dumping seafood imports and
virtually uncontrolled waterfront development. By a comparison of three groups of fishing
communities, i.e., diminished communities, residual communities, and resilient
communities, the thesis explores how communities respond to the challenges and encourages
fishermen to take action to preserve their generation-long fishing tradition.
In conclusion, the thesis suggests that a solution to ease the decline of fishing
communities requires cooperation of all parties concerned, including the fishery regulatory
agency, commercial fishermen, and the federal and local government.
Size: 3255k
Download a sample of the first 25 pages