Megan Bailey

BSc (hons) Zoology, University of Western Ontario (2003)

MSc Resource Management and Environmental Studies,

University of British Columbia (2007)

My Masters work, completed at the Fisheries Centre, focused on analyzing unregulated and illegal fishing in a remote area of Indonesia known as Raja Ampat. This area boasts the world's highest coral reef biodiversity, and marine resources provide food and economic security to the region. The results of my thesis were shared with stakeholders in Raja Ampat, and will hopefully be incorporated into their future fisheries management plans.

In January 2008 I began my PhD study. Like my Masters, I am studying under the supervision of Dr. Rashid Sumaila in the Fisheries Economics Research Unit.  My work will focus on the economics of tuna fisheries in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean. Tuna fisheries in this area are fished by several countries, contribute to food and economic security in the region, and are consumed by nations all over the world. As highly migratory fish stocks, tuna are inherently difficult to manage jointly. However, it is generally shown that joint management of shared stocks can yield substantial economic benefits. As such, the objectives of this research are 1. To estimate the possible gains to the system through cooperative management of tuna fisheries; 2. To evaluate the effect of certain policy decisions (for example closed areas or subsidy elimination) on the system; and 3. To assist in the identification of necessary components of a self-sustaining collaborative agreement. If you are interested in reading about the application of game theory to shared stocks, specifically tuna fisheries in the Pacific, see this document.

This work is generously funded by World Wildlife Fund. In 2008 further funding came from the Province of British Columbia through the Pacific Century Award, and the University of British Columbia, through a University Graduate Fellowship. In 2009 and onwards, funding is through a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council  (SSHRC) CGS Scholarship.

In 2008 and part of 2009, I did work with the Ecosystem-Based Management (EBM) Tools Network (www.ebmtools.org). Through a working group we were trying to increase the integration of social science-based software tools in EBM projects around the world. More on this working group can be found at http://www.ebmtools.org/about_us/social_science.html.

In October, 2008, I took over as the editor of 2 Fisheries Centre publications: FishBytes and the Sea Around Us project newsletter. Please contact me if you'd like to receive electronic copies of these newsletters. Also, email submissions can be sent my way if you have something you'd like to see published in our newsletters.

PUBLICATIONS (download CV)

Peer-reviewed

Bailey, M., Sumaila, U.R., and Lindroos, M. 2010. Application of game theory to fisheries over three decades. Fisheries Research, 102:1-8.

Bailey, M., Rotinsulu, C., and Sumaila, U.R. 2008. The migrant anchovy fishery in Kabui Bay, Raja Ampat, Indonesia: Catch, profitability and income distribution. Marine Policy, 32: 483-488.

Bailey, M., Petrie, S., and Badzinski, S. 2008. Diets of mute swans in lower Great Lakes coastal marshes. Journal of Wildlife Management, 72(3): 726-732.

Research Reports

Bailey, M., Sumaila, U.R., and Martell, S.J.D. 2011. Can cooperative management of tuna fisheries in the Pacific solve the growth overfishing problem? Fisheries Centre Working Paper 2011-01, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. Canada. (In review).

Sumaila, U.R., and Bailey, M. 2011. Sequential fishing of western and central Pacific tuna stocks. Fisheries Centre Working Paper 2011-02, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. Canada. (In review).

Munro, G., Turris, B., Clark, C., Sumaila, U.R., and Bailey, M. 2009. Impacts of Harvesting Rights in Canadian Pacific Fisheries, Statistical and Economic Analysis Series, No 1-3, ISSN 1921-877X.  Ottawa, Fisheries and Oceans Canada.

Bailey, M., and Sumaila, U.R. 2008. Towards ecosystem-based management in the Bird's Head function seascape of Papua, Indonesia: The economic sub-project. Chapter 2 in Bailey, M., and Pitcher, T.J. (Eds) Ecological and economic analyses of marine ecosystems in the Bird's Head seascape, Papua, Indonesia: II. Fisheries Centre Research Reports 16(1): 186 pp.

Bailey, M., and Sumaila, U.R. 2008. Destructive fishing in Raja Ampat, Indonesia: An applied principal-agent analysis. Chapter 3 in Bailey, M., and Pitcher, T.J. (Eds) Ecological and economic analyses of marine ecosystems in the Bird's Head seascape, Papua, Indonesia: II. Fisheries Centre Research Reports 16(1): 186 pp.

Book Chapters

Bailey, M., Quaatey, s., Armah, A.K., Jacquet, J., Khan, A., Alder, J. and Sumaila., U.R.  2010. Meeting socioeconomic objectives in Ghana's sardinella fishery. In D.M. Nanang and T.K. Nunifu (Eds) Natural resources in Ghana: management, policy and economics. Nova Publishers.

Ishimura, G. and Bailey, M. 2010. Defining sustainability of fishery resources. Sustainability Science, Vol. 1. United Nations University Press. Tokyo, Japan.

Book Reviews

Ecosystem-based Management for the Oceans by K. McLeod and H. Leslie (Eds.). 2009, Island Press. Reviewed in Oryx International Journal of Conservation 44(2), p. 304-305. 2010.

Popular Articles

Bailey, M. 2011. Dr Daniel Bromley asks if fisheries management is pertinent at the 10th Larkin Lecture. FishBytes 17(2).
Bailey, M. and W. Swartz. 2010. Getting out of the office and onto the fishing grounds. FishBytes 16(5).
Bailey, M. 2010. All about bycatch at the 61st Tuna Conference. FishBytes 16(3).
Bailey, M., and S. Hinch. 2009. Case of the missing salmon. FishBytes 15(5).
Bailey, M. 2009. Global games: FAME hosts game theory workshop. Sea Around Us Project, Issue 53.
Bailey, M., and Sumaila, U.R. 2008. Power in diversity: Bringing people together and putting ideas out. Sea Around Us Project, Issue 49.
Bailey, M., and Ishimura, G. 2007. 2007 NAAFE Conference in Merida, Mexico. FishBytes 13(2).
Bailey, M. 2006. Adams River sockeye salmon run. FishBytes 12(6).
Bailey, M. 2006. Meeting fishers in Raja Ampat, Indonesia: perspectives of a new economist. FishBytes 12(2).

PRESENTATIONS AND LECTURES 

AWARDS

2010          GeoEye Tuna Conference Scholarship
2009-2012 SSHRC CGS Doctoral Scholarship
2008-2009 University Graduate Fellowship
2008-2009 Pacific Century Award
2007          Pacific Fisheries Biologist Travel Grant
2006-2007 SSHRC Masters Scholarship
2004          NSERC Summer Internship