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E-grāmata: Marine and Coastal Ecosystem Valuation, Institutions, and Policy in Southeast Asia

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Feb-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Verlag, Singapore
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789811001413
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Feb-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Verlag, Singapore
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789811001413

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This book is a compendium of case studies illustrating how economic tools and techniques can be used to address a wide range of problems in the management and conservation of marine and coastal ecosystems in a developing country context. The studies, which were conducted with support from the Economy and Environment Program for Southeast Asia (EEPSEA), cover topics such as the mobilization of conservation finance from beneficiaries of marine and coastal ecosystem services; quantification of ecosystem damages and their impact on dependents of ecosystem resources and services; determination of the best package of policy reforms that price pollution; how to determine the best package of policy reforms that price pollution and regulate economic activities generating pollution with the goal of restoring coastal and marine resources; and deriving the appropriate institutional arrangement to achieve sustainable management of fisheries and coastal resources. Studies in the book also provide general guidelines for conducting economic appraisals. The book is essential reading for teachers, researchers, students and practitioners in fishery economics, economic development, ecosystem management, and key issues facing policymakers in the Southeast Asian region.
1 Introduction: Marine and Coastal Ecosystem Valuation, Institutions, and Policy in Southeast Asia
1(16)
Herminia A. Francisco
Part I Coastal Marine Ecosystem Services in Southeast Asia: Support for Conservation Initiatives
Herminia A. Francisco
2 Economic Valuation of the Philippine's Caramoan Beachscape
17(14)
Raul G. Bradecina
3 An Economic Analysis of Coral Reefs in the Andaman Sea of Thailand
31(16)
Udomsak Seenprachawong
4 Conservation Versus Development: Valuation of Coral Reefs Questions Port Expansion Plan in Vietnam
47(24)
Pham Khanh Nam
Tran Vo Hung Son
5 An Economic Valuation of Coastal Ecosystems in Phang Nga Bay, Thailand
71(22)
Udomsak Seenprachawong
6 Willingness to Pay for Whale Shark Conservation in Sorsogon, Philippines
93(36)
Anabeth L. Indab
7 Mobilizing Resources for Marine Turtle Conservation in Asia: A Cross-Country Perspective
129(26)
Orapan Nabangchang-Srisawalak
Jin Jianjun
Anabeth L. Indab
Truong Dang Thuy
Dieldre Harder
Rodelio F. Subade
Part II Pollution and Land Degradation
Nancy Olewiler
8 Pollution Control and Sustainable Fishery Management in Southern Songkhla Lake, Thailand
155(30)
Kunlayanee Pornpinatepong
Sakchai Kiripat
Sinad Treewanchai
Sukampon Chongwilaikasaem
Chotima Pornsawang
Pathomwat Chantarasap
Chantip Chandee
9 Productivity Effects of Water Pollution Due to Excessive Aquaculture Structures and Overstocking
185(16)
Zenaida M. Sumalde
Karen Lou A. Francisco
Mildren Penales
10 Reverting Disused Fishpond Lease Agreement Areas to Mangrove Forests in Region VI (Western Visayas), Philippines
201(24)
Alice Joan G. Ferrer
Jinky C. Hopanda
Michael Q. Orquejo
Alan Dino F. Moscoso
Resurreccion B. Sadaba
11 Environmental Trade-Offs from Coastal Reclamation: The Case of Cebu, Philippines
225(24)
Lourdes O. Montenegro
Part III Institutions and Policies in Fisheries Management
Alice Joan G. Ferrer
12 A Fishery in Transition: Impact of a Community Marine Reserve on a Coastal Fishery in Northern Mindanao, Philippines
249(18)
Asuncion B. de Guzman
13 Do Institutions Affect the Performance of Marine Protected Areas? Evidences from the Philippines
267(20)
Esmyra P. Javier
14 Fisheries Management Options for Visayan Sea, Philippines: The Case of Northern Iloilo
287(24)
Alice Joan G. Ferrer
15 Response of Fishermen to Fishing Control Policies in Southern Songkhla Lake, Thailand: A Field Experiment
311(18)
Kunlayanee Pornpinatepong
Pathomwat Chantarasap
Jumtip Seneerattanaprayul
Wittawat Hemtanon
Papitchaya Saelim
16 The Impacts of Artificial Reefs on the Income of Artisanal Fishers in Terengganu, Malaysia
329(12)
Shaufique Fahmi Sidique
Kusairi Mohd Noh
Gazi Md Nurul Islam
Aswani Farhana Mohd Noh
17 Economic Evaluation of Implementing Minimum Legal Size on Blue Swimming Crab Fishery in Indonesia
341(24)
Rizal Bahtiar
Nuva
Dessy Anggraeni
Nia Kurniawati Hidayat
18 Conclusion: What We Have Learned
365(4)
Nancy Olewiler
Index 369
Dr. Nancy Olewiler was Director of Simon Fraser Universitys (SFU) School of Public Policy since its founding in 2003 until September 2014.  She has a PhD in Economics from the University of British Columbia. Prior to coming to the Economics department at SFU in 1990, she was an Associate Professor of Economics at Queen's University in Ontario. Dr. Olewiler has held visiting positions at the University of Colorado, University of California, Berkeley, and University of New South Wales.  She was Chair of SFU's Economics department from 1995 to 2000. Dr. Olewiler has held a number of positions serving many communities, locally and internationally.  These include being a member the Board of Directors of BC Hydro from 2001 to 2010 and TransLink from 2008 to 2013 (where she served as its Chair from 2010 to 2013).  She is a member of the National Statistics Council and Chairs the Macroeconomic Accounts Advisory Committee for Statistics Canada.  Her areas of research include natural resource and environmental economics and policy, the impact of environmental regulation on the economy, and environmental tax policy. She has published in academic journals, edited books, has written two widely used textbooks, and produced numerous reports for the Canadian federal and provincial governments on a wide range of environmental and natural resource issues. From 1990 to 1995 she was Managing Editor of Canadian Public Policy, Canada's leading public policy journal. Dr. Olewiler is a research mentor to the Environment and Economy Program for Southeast Asia (EEPSEA) and the Latin American and Caribbean Environmental Economy Program (LACEEP). 

Dr. Herminia Francisco is the Director of the Economy and Environment Program for Southeast Asia (EEPSEA). The Program plays an important role in developing researchers capacity to produce high quality, policy relevant studies to support improved environmental management in Southeast Asia. EEPSEA receives funding support from the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) of Canada and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA). It has been administered by WorldFish since November 20012. Prior to taking the post as Director of EEPSEA, Dr. Francisco was stationed in Cambodia for two years where she managed the capacity-building training and research grant activities for select institutions in Lao PDR, Cambodia and Vietnam. Dr. Francisco also taught for several years at the University of the Philippines at Los Bańos and was also involved in providing consultancy services to several international organizations before joining EEPSEA. Her written work covers topics such as economics of soil erosion and conservation, pricing of environmental services, climate change adaptation, and institutional issues governing the management of common pool resources.

Dr. Alice Joan G. Ferrer is a Professor of Economics at the University of the Philippines Visayas (UPV).  She is also currently the Executive Director of the Western Visayas Health Research and Development Consortium.  Her fields of specialization include fisheries social science, environmental and pollution economics, policy analysis, population economics, and health economics.  She has a PhD in Economics from the University of the Philippines School of Economics. Dr. Ferrer has been involved in various local and international research projects. Currently her research involvement include serving: as project leader in an EEPSEA-funded study on the Economics, Social Acceptability and Distributional Impacts of Mariculture in the Philippines; as co-principal investigator in a study on middlemen as crucial social-ecological linkages for achieving sustainable small-scale fisheries; and as team leader of the social analysis component of the project Coastal Area Capability Enhancement in Southeast Asia, a collaborative project of UPV, the Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center (SEAFDEC) and the Research Institute for Humanity and Nature (RIHN) in Japan.  She is also a member of the design team of the WorldFish-led Consortium Research Program on Aquatic Agriculture Systems in the Philippines. Dr. Ferrer has published various journal articles and has recently launched a book on disused brackish water fishponds and mangrove areas rehabilitation.