Learn Before
Analysis of a Community Resource Management Plan
A small coastal town relies heavily on a local bay for fishing. In recent years, fish stocks have declined dramatically due to overfishing. The town council, composed of elected residents, has proposed a plan to manage the bay. The plan requires all fishing boats to pay an annual fee, which will be used to fund a fish hatchery to replenish the stocks. The plan also sets a daily catch limit for each boat. However, there is no proposed system for monitoring the daily catches or for penalizing those who exceed the limit.
Analyze the proposed community plan. Based on the principles of successful local resource management, identify one key strength and one significant weakness of this plan. Explain your reasoning for each.
0
1
Tags
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Economy
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Valencia's Water Court for Resource Management
Analysis of a Community Resource Management Plan
A residential neighborhood is facing a problem with its shared community garden. A few residents are over-harvesting vegetables, leaving little for others, and the shared tool shed is consistently left disorganized. Which of the following proposed solutions best exemplifies a community-based institutional approach to managing this shared resource?
The success of a community-led initiative to manage a shared local resource, such as a lake used for fishing, depends solely on the community's collective effort to maintain the resource's health (e.g., cleaning the shoreline and monitoring water quality).
Designing a Sustainable Community Fishery
Evaluating a Community-Based Plan for Reef Conservation
A local community is establishing institutions to manage its shared lake. Match each problem with the most appropriate community-led institutional solution.
A coastal village relies on a shared mangrove forest for fishing and protection from storms. However, over-harvesting of wood and fish is threatening the forest's health. Arrange the following actions in the most logical order for the community to establish a successful, self-governing initiative to manage this resource.
For a local community to successfully manage a shared resource like a common pasture, it requires not only collective effort to maintain the quality of the land but also individual ________ to prevent overgrazing and ensure the resource's long-term sustainability.
A small, isolated island community has successfully managed its shared fishing grounds for generations by following unwritten rules about catch limits and fishing seasons. Recently, a new ferry service has brought a significant number of new residents to the island who do not share the same historical or cultural background. The fish stocks have begun to decline rapidly. Based on the principles of successful community-led resource management, what is the most likely reason for the failure of the traditional system?
Evaluating a Community Park Management Strategy