Keith R. Criddle
Utah State University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Keith R. Criddle.
Marine Policy | 2000
Keith R. Criddle; Seth Macinko
Despite their apparent economic benefits to harvesters, individual fishing quotas (IFQs) have only been adopted in three US fisheries: Mid-Atlantic surf clam and ocean quahog; South Atlantic wreckfish; and, North Pacific halibut and sablefish. During the 1996 reauthorization of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, Congress temporarily blocked implementation of additional IFQ programs in US fisheries. In this paper, we argue that because of the emergence of an alternative, the cooperative, it is unlikely that new IFQs will be adopted in federally managed US fisheries. From an economic perspective, cooperatives offer the advantage of eliminating production externalities that may remain under an IFQ program with relatively large owner classes. More significantly, development of IFQ programs appears to be increasingly overwhelmed by the proliferation of both equity concerns and seemingly interminable rent-seeking behavior -- both issues that can effectively block adoption of IFQs. Ironically (and paradoxically?), by reducing the scope of the equity issues acknowledged, the cooperative alternative narrows the pool of claimants and modifies the behavior of the remainder, making implementation more likely. A further irony exists in that IFQs are widely thought to be best designed at the local/regional level while part of the appeal of the cooperative model is that it appears to shortcut the often protracted nature of the local/regional political process by relying on direct intervention from Washington, DC, in the form of actions by Congress or the Justice Department.
Annals of Operations Research | 2000
Keith R. Criddle; Andrei Y. Streletski
A static stochastic simulation was used to assess the performance of alternative management strategies in the satisfaction of multiple objective criteria in the context of a sequentially exploited transboundary resource. The model was applied to the Yukon River chum salmon (Oncorhynchus keta) fishery. Four strategies were evaluated using three criteria: probability of satisfying escapement objectives; probability of jointly satisfying escapement and subsistence harvest objectives; and probability of simultaneously reaching escapement, subsistence and commercial harvest objectives. The modeled strategies were also compared with the actual performance of the fishery for 1980–1995. The results indicate that satisfaction of escapement and subsistence harvest goals in the middle Yukon depends on imposing restrictive limits on commercial harvests in the lower Yukon. However, even with full information, escapement objectives in the upper drainage are only satisfied 65–70% and 75–80% of the time for summer and fall chum, respectively. The model was also used to explore the effects of increased average run strength that could arise from reduced bycatch of Yukon origin chum in marine fisheries. The results suggest that reduced marine interceptions are unlikely to substantially increase the probability of satisfying catch and escapement goals for the middle and upper Yukon.
Annals of Regional Science | 2002
Charles Hamel; Mark Herrmann; S. Todd Lee; Keith R. Criddle; Hans T. Geier
Economics Research Institute Study Paper | 2000
Keith R. Criddle; Mark Herrmann; Joshua A. Greenberg
Archive | 2001
Keith R. Criddle; Seth Macinko
Economics Research Institute Study Paper | 2000
Mark Herrmann; S. Todd Lee; Charles Hamel; Keith R. Criddle; Hans T. Geier; Joshua A. Greenberg; Carol E. Lewis
Economics Research Institute Study Paper | 2000
Keith R. Criddle; Seth Macinko
Archive | 1998
Mark Herrmann; Joshua A. Greenberg; Keith R. Criddle
Archive | 2017
Keith R. Criddle; Stephanie Warpinski; Mark Herrmann; Joshua A. Greenberg
Archive | 2016
Keith R. Criddle; Stephanie Warpinski; Mark Herrmann; Joshua A. Greenberg