Fish in the Face of Climate Change: A ten-year analysis of fisheries conflicts in the Barents Sea
Abstract
Climate change is shifting fisheries and opening up new routes. Such a phenomenon
has the potential to contribute to conflict between users. The Barents Sea region
of the Arctic possesses both significant fish resources and vulnerability to conflict
and climate change. Using published methodology documenting fisheries conflicts, this
project analyzes fisheries conflicts in the Barents Sea by reviewing news articles
obtained through the Nexis Uni database. Out of a total of 7,499 articles identified
for the period 2013-2022, 22 unique fisheries dispute events and 54 fisheries dispute
aggregates were identified in the region. We found that major conflict drivers include
illegal fishing, ground limitations, foreign fishers, weak governance, and marginalization.
We also found that the majority of conflicts in the region involved disputes between
the Norwegian and Russian authorities, fishers, activists, and the oil industry.
Type
Master's projectDepartment
Nicholas School of the EnvironmentPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27207Citation
Duquela, Maite; Murphy, Stephanie; & Iturralde, Sasha (2023). Fish in the Face of Climate Change: A ten-year analysis of fisheries conflicts in
the Barents Sea. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27207.Collections
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