• Environmental governance theories: A review and application to coastal systems 

      Partelow, Stefan; Schlüter, Achim; Armitage, Derek; Bavinck, Maarten; Carlisle, Keith; Gruby, Rebecca L.; Hornidge, Anna-Katharina; Le Tissier, Martin; Pittman, Jeremy; Song, Andrew M.; Sousa, Lisa P.; Văidianu, Natașa; Van Assche, Kristof (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2020)
      This article synthesizes and compares environmental governance theories. For each theory we outline its main tenets, claims, origin, and supporting literature. We then group the theories into focused versus combinatory frameworks for comparison. The analysis resonates with many types of ecosystems; however, to make it more tangible, we focus on coastal systems. First, we characterize coastal governance ...
    • Reconstructing governability: How fisheries are made governable 

      Song, Andrew M.; Johnsen, Jahn Petter; Morrison, Tiffany (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2018-12-15)
      Governability is an important concept in the political and environmental social sciences with increasing application to socio‐ecological systems such as fisheries. Indeed, governability analyses of fisheries and related systems such as marine‐protected areas have generated innovative ways to implement sustainability ideals. Yet, despite progress made, we argue that there remain limitations in current ...
    • Transboundary research in fisheries 

      Song, Andrew M.; Scholtens, Joeri; Stephen, Johny; Bavinck, Jan Maarten; Chuenpagdee, Ratana (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2016-11-18)
      Spatial boundaries have become an indispensable part of regimes and tools for regulating fisheries, with examples including marine protected areas, regional fisheries management organizations and Exclusive Economic Zones. Yet, it is also widely acknowledged that boundaries are a social construct, which may be resisted by both fishers and fish ecology. The ensuing spatial and institutional mismatches ...