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Dive into the research topics where Sarah Keene Meltzoff is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarah Keene Meltzoff.


Coastal Management | 1986

The social and political economy of coastal zone management: shrimp mariculture in Ecuador.

Sarah Keene Meltzoff; Edward LiPuma

Abstract The paper examines the applicability of First World CZM policy for the Third World by focusing on Ecuadors shrimp mariculture, an industry whose explosive growth has reshaped the coastal zone and generated problems threatening loss of the resource base itself. This has led to recognized need for CZM and movement by development agencies to transfer the CZ policies of developed countries. Against this background, the analysis explores local concepts of investment and conservation, the role of government and law, and the influence of the social economy on mariculture development. It illuminates how local use and management of coastal resources is inseparable from specifically Ecuadorean cultural concepts, institutions, and practices. This places in relief the salient differences between management in the First and Third Worlds, illuminating how coastal zone management must not only be internally consistent, but cognizant of and integrated into the prevailing social, economic, and political conditions.


Coastal Management | 2002

Competing Visions for Marine Tenure and Co-Management: Genesis of a Marine Management Area System in Chile

Sarah Keene Meltzoff; Yair Gibrán Lichtensztajn; Wolfgang Stotz

Chile has been attempting to establish a Management Area (MA) system that melds the use of marine protected areas with marine tenure. The process has brought to the fore the competing interests of various user groups: artisanal fishermen, marine science professionals, government managers, tourist developers, and the Navy. We explore the core relationships among fishermen and the ecologists and biologists whose work is essential for establishing and maintaining a MA. The MA systems creation and implementation raise the key question of whether a marine tenure system can work under the conditions imposed by the Chilean government. There is a need to recognize and reconcile contradictions in a government management model that strives simultaneously to be a conservation zone and a financially profitable co-management zone. This article examines the MA management systems fault lines in the context of Chiles political economy, and the intimate interaction of management with fishermens cultural survival strategies.


The Journal of Asian Studies | 1987

Prehistory in the Pacific Islands: A Study of Variation in Language, Customs, and Human Biology.

Sarah Keene Meltzoff

How, asks John Terrell in this richly illustrated and original book, can we best account for the remarkable diversity of the Pacific Islanders in biology, language, and custom? Traditionally scholars have recognized a simple racial division between Polynesians, Micronesians, Melanesians, Australians, and South-east Asians: peoples allegedly differing in physical appearance, temperament, achievements, and perhaps even intelligence. Terrell shows that such simple divisions do not fit the known facts and provide little more than a crude, static picture of human diversity.


Contemporary Sociology | 1987

The New England Fishing Economy: Jobs, Income and Kinship

Sarah Keene Meltzoff; Edward LiPuma; Peter B. Doeringer; Philip Moss; David Terkla


Journal of Political Ecology | 1995

Marisquadoras of the Shellfish Revolution: The Rise of Women in Co-management on Illa de Arousa, Galicia

Sarah Keene Meltzoff


American Ethnologist | 1997

The crosscurrents of ethnicity and class in the construction of public policy

Edward LiPuma; Sarah Keene Meltzoff


Archive | 1983

A Japanese fishing joint venture: worker experience and national development in the Solomon Islands

Sarah Keene Meltzoff; Edward LiPuma


American Ethnologist | 1989

toward a theory of culture and class: an Iberian example

Edward LiPuma; Sarah Keene Meltzoff


American Ethnologist | 1986

the troubled seas of Spanish fishermen: marine policy and the economy of change

Sarah Keene Meltzoff; Edward LiPuma


Human Organization | 1986

Hunting for Tuna and Cash in the Solomons: A Rebirth of Artisanal Fishing in Malaita

Sarah Keene Meltzoff; Edward LiPuma

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David Terkla

University of Massachusetts Boston

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Philip Moss

University of Massachusetts Lowell

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