What Is Fisheries Conflict?
Fisheries conflict is a dispute, tension, or disagreement over the use of fisheries resources. Common fisheries conflicts include:
- disputes over boundaries and fishing ground locations
 - illegal, unregulated, and unreported fishing
 - tensions between local and migrant or foreign fishers
 - disagreements between interest groups over quotas meant to manage resource harvest.
 
The causes of fisheries conflicts are diverse, complex, and often indirect. Consequently, a collaborative and interdisciplinary approach to understanding – and thus preventing – fisheries conflict is needed. In 2017, Secure Fisheries launched the Fisheries Conflict Research Consortium to bring together academics, policy advisers, and NGOs. We are a group of researchers organized around the topic of fisheries conflict and dedicated to reducing it through policy interventions.
Our Work
- Establishing formal channels of communication between researchers
 - Organizing research efforts to leverage partnerships and varied skills while avoiding overlap and competition
 - Increasing understanding of the root causes and consequences of fisheries conflict around the world
 - Raising awareness about fisheries conflict in relevant stakeholder communities
 - Promoting interventions that reduce the likelihood and intensity of fisheries conflict and that are based on sound science and realistic policies
 
Click here to see a full list of fisheries conflict publications by consortium members.
Members
Our team includes biologists, economists, political scientists, policy advisors, legal experts, fisheries scientists, and more.

