headBanner10.jpg
Velkomin á vef fishernet.is
  • Arctic Portal
  • AP Community
  • Portlets
  • Arctic Council
  • Science
  • Organizations
  • Maps
  • Library
  • Acronyms
  • Links
  • Search
  • Home
  • About
  • Fishernet Country Reports
  • Fishernet Stories
  • Community
  • Coastal Culture
  • Boats & ships
  • Fishing
  • Marine Mammals
  • Greenland & Faroe Islands
  • The coast
  • Books and magazines
  • Conference
  • News & Events
  • Interesting projects
  • Material from mass media
  • Interesting links
  • All tags
  • Webtree
  • Login
Icelandic(IS)English (United Kingdom)
forum

friendlybanner_logo

fishernet_newsletter_3_logo

West Greenland´s transition cod to shrimp Transition: Local Dimensions of Climate Change
Greenland_betriWest Greenland's transition from a cod-fishing to a shrimp-fishing economy, ca. 1960–90, provides a case study in the human dimensions of climatic change. Physical, biological, and social systems interacted in complex ways to affect coastal communities. For this integrated case study, Lawrence C. Hamilton, Benjamin C. Brown and Rasmus Ole Rasmussen examine linkages between atmospheric conditions (including the North Atlantic Oscillation), ocean circulation, ecosystem conditions, fishery activities, and the livelihoods and population changes of two West Greenland towns: Sisimiut, south of Disko Bay, and Paamiut, on the southwest coast. Sisimiut prospered as a fishing center through the cod-to-shrimp transition. Paamiut, more specialized in cod fishing, declined. Their stories suggest two general propositions about the human dimensions of climatic change. First, socially important environmental changes result not simply from climatic change, but from interactions between climate, ecosystem, and resource usage. Second, environmental changes affect people differentially and through interactions with social factors. Social networks and cohesion (social capital) are important, in addition to skills (human capital), investments (physical capital), and alternative resources (natural capital): all shape how the benefits and costs are distributed.

Published with permission from the authors and Arctic Institute of North America.

West Greenland's Cod-to-Shrimp Transition: Local Dimensions of Climate Change

 

 
fishernet.is | Stefansson | http://www.svs.is | tel: 460 8980 | fax: 460 8989 | contact