16619IIED.pdf
Language:
English
Published: April 2016
Area(s):
Shaping Sustainable Markets Papers
ISBN: 9781784313340
Product code:16619IIED

Fisheries play an important role in meeting global food demands. But coastal fisheries are in decline due to overfishing – and fisheries management in developing world countries is also complicated by significant poverty levels. In response, fisheries managers are increasingly using economic incentive-based approaches to reward beneficiaries – such as fishers – for complying with legislation aimed at sustainably managing the resource.

One of the rare examples of both mismanagement and restoration of fisheries using an economic-incentive mechanism is Bangladesh’s most important single-species fishery: hilsa. In 2004, a scheme was developed to support hilsa management in Bangladesh. But inadequacies were identified with the regulatory framework and the compensation scheme. This synthesis report is the outcome of a Darwin Initiative-funded project which has sought to improve the effectiveness of the incentive-based hilsa management scheme. It assesses the current ecological and socio-economic dynamics of hilsa fishery management in Bangladesh. The outcomes and recommendations should be of much use in hilsa fisheries management and improving the livelihoods of fishing communities.

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Cite this publication

Dewhurst-Richman, N., Mohammed, E., Ali, M., Hassan, K., Wahab, M., Ahmed, Z., Islam, M., Bladon, A., , ., Ahmed, C., Majumder, M., Hossain, M., Rahman, A. and Hussein, B. (2016). Balancing carrots and sticks: incentives for sustainable hilsa fishery management in Bangladesh. .
Available at https://www.iied.org/16619iied