Scientific journal paper
Fisheries, chaos and ethics. A note on India status
José Filipe (Filipe, J. A.); Manuel Pacheco Coelho (Coelho, M. P.); Manuel Ferreira (Ferreira, M. A. M.); Mutharasu Appasamy Selvarasu (Selvarasu, A.);
Journal Title
International Journal of Latest Trends in Finance and Economics Sciences
Year (definitive publication)
2013
Language
English
Country
United Kingdom
More Information
Web of Science®

This publication is not indexed in Web of Science®

Scopus

This publication is not indexed in Scopus

Google Scholar

Times Cited: 2

(Last checked: 2026-04-11 21:45)

View record in Google Scholar

This publication is not indexed in Overton

Abstract
Historically in the world, since last century,fish stocks of many species have been overexploited. A good management of fisheries became essential to permit the preservation of species. Managing fisheries got increasingly complex, once many interests, often contradictory, are always involved. Moreover, through time, political will has not been enough to change things in many places around the world and overexploitation has remained for many species. In India, with a strong population density in many coastal areas depending on fishing, the situation is very severe for many species and new requirements for preservation are now being tried. In literature, fisheries have been analysed in contexts of uncertainty. Chaos theory is one of the theories that have been used to explain fisheries. This work intends to represent a reflection about fisheries overexploitation,considering the utilization of chaos theory and the understanding of the related problems taking into account ethics setting. The India situation is showed.
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
Chaos; Fisheries; Ethics; Overexploitation