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CLIMATE CHANGE
& FISHERIES

FISH, FOOD SECURITY
& ECONOMY

SCIENCE, POLICY,
SOCIETY

Publicationsview all

Eventsview all

VII Meeting for Fisheries Management Alternatives

Program Director and Research Associate Andres Cisneros-Montemayor will be attending the VII Encuentro de Alternativas de Manejo Pesquero [VII Meeting...
January 12, 2017 - January 13, 2017

Arctic Frontiers Conference

Nereus Fellow Richard Caddell will be presenting on “Precautionary Management and the Regulation of Future Fisheries” at the Arctic Frontiers Conference in Tromsø. The conference brings together more than 1400 representatives from academia, government, and business to discuss the challenges associated with sustainable development in the Artic.

January 22, 2017 - January 27, 2017

opinionview all

  • Top ten ocean and fisheries stories of the year on the Nereus Program website

    The ten most popular stories on the Nereus Program website in 2016, including on El Ninos, fishing subsidies, Brexit, science fiction prototyping, the TPP, salps, jellyfish fisheries, vaquita and the South China Sea.

  • In response to: A Global Estimate of Seafood Consumption by Coastal Indigenous Peoples

    Traditionally, Indigenous people have resisted research, especially quantitative research that has fed into the imposition of discriminatory socio-economic and political policies to the detriment of Indigenous communities. However, having access to a global database that quantifies fish consumption specifically by Coastal Indigenous peoples around the world, is a critical contribution to Indigenous struggle on a number of fronts.

  • The Madingley model and questions of abstraction and scale

    Madingley is a global computational model. To a broad approximation, the Madingley model represents all (most) forms of life. It achieves this by using what’s called a functional-type representation. Species are aggregated in to broad categories that describe a select number of their properties, rather than everything about them. For some, this conceptual leap is too much. Why take a step towards representing all life, but miss the explicit inclusion of species? The answer lies in making the best of human knowledge, and balancing computational expense.