@article{Jaeger:296616,
      recid = {296616},
      author = {Jaeger, William},
      title = {BETTER SALMON MANAGEMENT IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST BY  COMBINING TECHNICAL AND INSTITUTIONAL INNOVATIONS},
      address = {1996-11},
      number = {2276-2019-4754},
      series = {RP-178},
      pages = {50},
      year = {1996},
      abstract = {The restoration of depleted wild salmon stocks in the  Northwestern U.S. could be advanced with the  re-introduction of in-river fixed gear techniques such as  fishwheels, which offer substantial economic, biological,  and stock assessment advantages. A dynamic simulation model  is used to demonstrate that fishwheels could reduce costs  and increase net economic benefits to commercial fishers by  a factor of five. Additional simulations indicates that the  potentially adverse income and employment consequences that  often accompany policy or technological changes can be  avoided with appropriate institutions and sequenced policy  implementation. The analysis confirms the feasibility of a  transition path to more sustainable salmon management that  protects and improves the economic interests of current  commercial fishers while at the same time restoring wild  salmon stocks.},
      url = {http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/296616},
      doi = {https://doi.org/10.22004/ag.econ.296616},
}