News and Events
Seminar
Current and Future Research in the Philippines: the Live Reef Fish Trade and Tourism-Fishing Interactions
Mike Fabinyi
Where: ARC Centre of Excellence Conference Room, JCU (DB44). Video-link to Centre for Marine Studies, UQ
When: Thursday 15 October, 12:00 pm
Abstract:
Based on long-term anthropological fieldwork since 2005 in Palawan province, Philippines, this presentation will provide an overview of two aspects of my ongoing research: the live reef fish for food trade (LRFT) and the interactions between fishing and tourism. I will focus on current resource use trends among fishers in the LRFT, the distinctive problems associated with governing the LRFT, and discuss some of the prospects that a recent boom in tourism offers for transitions to more sustainable patterns of resource use among fishers.
Biography of the speaker:
Mike's research is focused on the social and political aspects of marine resource management in the Asia-Pacific. He recently completed his PhD in the Resource Management in Asia-Pacific Program at the Australian National University. His thesis examined fishers' responses to marine resource regulations in Palawan province, Philippines. More recent work in the Philippines has focused on analysing a quota system for the live reef fish for food trade and the interactions between fishing and tourism. He is currently a Research Associate at the School of Social Sciences, University of Queensland


