Illegal, Unreported, and Unregulated Fishing in Southeast Asia: Trends and Actors

IF 1.3
Lily Schlieman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

executive summary: This essay identifies trends and actors involved in illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing in two of Southeast Asia's regional seascapes (the South China Sea and the Sulu-Sulawesi Seascape), explores the political and socioeconomic factors that enable IUU fishing, and offers recommendations to governments and other stakeholders. main argument IUU fishing threatens the food, ecological, and economic security of coastal communities in Southeast Asia's seascapes. The region is home to incredible marine biodiversity that supports commercially important fish stocks. However, IUU fishing, poor fisheries management, and bad governance—coupled with environmental degradation and a lack of monitoring, control, surveillance, and enforcement capacity—leave these stocks in a precarious position. The clandestine nature of IUU fishing can also attract crimes of convergence, including forced labor and trafficking of humans, arms, drugs, and wildlife. To counter IUU fishing, national governments in Southeast Asia should take steps to improve cooperation, build cohesiveness, and share data and relevant information with each other and with regional organizations. Likewise, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and regional fisheries management organizations should take a greater leadership role to facilitate data and information sharing between Southeast Asian governments. policy implications • Cooperative and joint stock assessments in the South China Sea and the Sulu-Sulawesi Seascape by governments, scientists, NGOs, and other stakeholders, with a focus on transboundary stocks, would significantly improve the monitoring and management of fisheries. • To bridge gaps in enforcement capacity, fisheries enforcement authorities should work with nontraditional partners, including local communities and trusted nations in the Indo-Pacific, such as the U.S., Australia, Japan, and the Republic of Korea. • Southeast Asian coastal states should work together to settle remaining maritime boundary disputes they have with each other and develop a cohesive regional bloc that strengthens their collective commitment to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and efforts to combat IUU fishing. • National governments and law enforcement should increase their capacity and technical capabilities to stop labor and human rights abuses on the water and in seafood processing facilities by working with NGOs, survivors, and other relevant stakeholders with expertise in the field.
东南亚的非法、未报告和无管制捕鱼:趋势和行为者
摘要:本文确定了东南亚两个区域海域(南中国海和苏拉威西海域)非法、不报告和不管制(IUU)捕捞的趋势和参与者,探讨了导致IUU捕捞的政治和社会经济因素,并向政府和其他利益相关者提出了建议。IUU捕鱼威胁着东南亚沿海社区的食物、生态和经济安全。该地区拥有令人难以置信的海洋生物多样性,支撑着重要的商业鱼类资源。然而,IUU捕鱼、糟糕的渔业管理和糟糕的治理,加上环境退化和缺乏监测、控制、监督和执法能力,使这些种群处于不稳定的境地。IUU捕鱼的秘密性质也可能吸引包括强迫劳动和贩运人口、武器、毒品和野生动物在内的趋同犯罪。为了打击IUU捕鱼,东南亚各国政府应采取措施加强合作,建立凝聚力,并相互之间以及与区域组织共享数据和相关信息。同样,东南亚国家联盟(Association of Southeast Asian Nations)和区域渔业管理组织应发挥更大的领导作用,促进东南亚各国政府之间的数据和信息共享。•各国政府、科学家、非政府组织和其他利益攸关方在南中国海和苏拉威西海域开展合作和联合种群评估,重点关注跨境种群,将显著改善渔业监测和管理。•为了弥合执法能力的差距,渔业执法当局应与非传统伙伴合作,包括当地社区和印度-太平洋地区值得信赖的国家,如美国、澳大利亚、日本和韩国。•东南亚沿海国家应共同努力,解决彼此之间遗留的海上边界争端,发展一个有凝聚力的区域集团,加强对《联合国海洋法公约》的集体承诺,并努力打击IUU捕鱼。•各国政府和执法部门应提高其能力和技术能力,通过与非政府组织、幸存者和其他具有该领域专业知识的利益相关者合作,制止水和海鲜加工设施中的劳工和人权侵犯。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Asia Policy
Asia Policy Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
55
期刊介绍: Asia Policy is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal presenting policy-relevant academic research on the Asia-Pacific that draws clear and concise conclusions useful to today’s policymakers.
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