An interdisciplinary insight into the human dimension in fisheries models. A systematic literature review in a European Union context
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/16010Date
2019-07-02Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Fisheries are complex adaptive social-ecological systems (SES) that consist of interlinked
human and ecosystems. They have mainly been studied by the natural sciences and
focused on the ecosystem. However, rising concerns about sustainability and increasing
complexity of societal challenges often require an understanding of fisheries in a SES
context. For this purpose, the study of the human system should be expanded within
fisheries science. Models are currently the most common method used in the field
and these need to include the human dimension, alongside the ecosystem, when
addressing fisheries systems as SES. The human dimension is an umbrella term for
the complex web of human processes and it is captured by disciplines from the social
sciences and the humanities. Consequently, capturing and synthesizing the variety of
disciplines involved in the human dimension, and integrating them into fisheries models,
requires an interdisciplinary approach. This study attempts to assess the presence
of the human dimension in fisheries models applied to a European Union context
and to evaluate interdisciplinarity within modeled human dimension aspects through a
systematic review and qualitative analysis. Within 31 modeling publications, 20 different
human dimension aspects could be identified within the categories of social phenomena,
social processes, and individual attributes. Most of the human dimension aspects
were modeled in an interdisciplinary manner in mathematical, statistical, simulation, or
conceptual models. Yet, predominantly through the use of economic and environmental
variables. We conclude that there is potential for the expansion of the human dimension
and interdisciplinarity in fisheries models. To reach this potential, one should consider
early involvement of all relevant disciplines in the formulation of theories, identification of
data, and in the model development. We provide recommendations for interdisciplinary
model development, communication, and documentation to increase our understanding
of fisheries as SES.