Good Governance, Scale and Power

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A01=Liza Griffin
Annex IIA
Author_Liza Griffin
Category=KCVG
CEC 2006a
CFP
Civil Society
common pool property rights
commons
environmental policy analysis
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
EU fisheries
EU Fishery
EU Policymaker
EU Scale
EU's Common Fishery Policy
EU's Green Paper
European Union regulation
fish
fish stocks
fisheries
fisheries governance
fisheries management reform
fishing
Fishing Industry Representative
Good Governance Discourse
Good Governance Processes
Good Governance Reforms
governance
governance theory
Governance White Paper
Griffin 2010a
NGO Lobbying
north sea
North Sea Cod
North Sea Fisher
North Sea fisheries
overfishing
power dynamics in fisheries governance
property rights
Propose EU Legislation
RACs
resource sustainability research
scaling
spatial governance theory
stakeholder participation fisheries
UK Civil Servant
UK's Coast
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138904927
  • Weight: 362g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Mar 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In recent years there have been several alarming predictions about the future of the planet’s fish stocks. As a result, many national governments and supranational institutions, including the European Union, have instituted reforms designed to mitigate the crisis.

This book examines the discourse and practice of ‘good governance’ in the context of fisheries management. It starts by examining the ‘crisis’ of fisheries in the North Sea, caused primarily by overfishing and failure of the European Union’s Common Fisheries Policy. It then goes on to analyse reforms to this policy enacted and planned between 2002 and 2013, and the proposition that collapse of fish stocks could occur as a result of deficiencies in new governing arrangements, i.e. failure to apply ‘principles of good governance’. The book argues that impediments to good governance practice in fisheries are not merely the result of implementation deficits, but that they constitute a more systematic failure. Governance theory addresses issues of power, but it does not recognise the many important spatially contingent and relational forms of power that are exercised in actual governing practice. For example, it frequently overlooks spatial practices and strategies, such as ‘scale jumping, ‘rescaling’ and the discursive redrawing of governing boundaries. This book exposes some of these spatial power relationships, showing that the presence of such relationships has implications for accountability and effective policymaking.

In sum, this book explores some of the ways in which we might better understand governance practice using theories of scale and relational concepts of power, and in the process it offers a critique and rethinking of governance theory. These reflections are made on the basis of an in-depth case study of the attempted pursuit of ‘good governance’ in the European Union via institutional reforms, focusing particularly on the thorny and fascinating case of North Sea fisheries management.

Liza Griffin is Lecturer in Environment and Sustainable Development at University College London, UK.

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