1st Edition

The Politics of Aquaculture Sustainability Interdependence, Territory and Regulation in Fish Farming

By Caitríona Carter Copyright 2018
    246 Pages 18 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    246 Pages 18 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Aquaculture is increasingly complementing global fisheries and is relevant to ocean and freshwater health, biodiversity and food security, as well as coastal management, tourism and natural heritage. This book makes the case for treating the governance of this industry as meriting attention in its own right, abandoning the polemic discussions of fish farming and opening up new ways for debating its past, present and future.

    Developing and applying an original analytical framework for studying fish farming aquaculture, embedded into larger theory about the changing political system, the author generates and compares new data on the governance of aquaculture. Detailed case studies are presented of Scottish salmon, Aquitaine trout in France and seabass and seabream in Greece. The book shows how ecological issues are related to economic and social issues, as well as interdependences between territories, public and private regulation and different knowledge forms, demonstrating that these are creating alternative approaches for sustainability governance. It provides a deeper understanding of the political aspects of governing European aquaculture, including how it both is structured by and is structuring politics.

    It is aimed at advanced students, researchers and professionals in aquaculture and fisheries, as well as those with a broader interest in sustainability politics and sustainability governing practices.

    1. Sustainability Interdependence: aquaculture, sustainability, territory, regulation and knowledge

    PART I: Theorising a politics of ‘sustainability interdependence’

    2. Sustainability narratives of nature-society interdependencies and the re-organsiation of state power

    3. From sustainability to ‘sustainability interdependence’: a new analytical framework

    PART II: Institutionalising sustainability in fish farming aquaculture

    4. Sustainability interdependence and fish farm/environment interactions: governing fish farming’s environmental impact

    5. Sustainability interdependence and access to fish farm sites: environmental landscape aesthetics and coastal/rural development

    6. Sustainability as a food governing problem: product quality and shadow ecologies

    7. CONCLUSION The ‘tangled politics’ of sustainability interdependence

    Annex 1

    Biography

    Caitríona Carter is a Research Professor in Political Science at ETBX, Irstea, France. She was previously Senior Lecturer in EU studies (political science), Europa Institute, University of Edinburgh, UK.

    "The Politics of Aquaculture is meticulously written and elegantly structured, with multiple conceptual layers tied effortlessly together. The author walks the reader through its structure and her arguments, with frequent summarizing of key points and drawing linkages to other chapters or sections as well as the overall objective of the book." Cecilia Engler, Ocean Yearbook Online June 2020