
Managing ecosystems – supporting communities
We see fisheries not just as a source of food or income, but as complex social-ecological systems—shaped by the environment, the communities who depend on them, and the formal and informal rules that guide how they are used.
Effective community-based fisheries management means supporting communities to navigate this complexity—to build legitimacy, make decisions and balance ecological recovery with human well-being.
Our approach is grounded in four core principles that guide progress along the Community Pathway and support sustainable, autonomous local management:

People and place are connected
Management must reflect the deep connections between communities and their marine environments ecologically, economically, and culturally.

Governance is local and legitimate
Decision-making should be driven by inclusive local institutions rooted in community priorities, with recognition across both customary and formal systems.

Knowledge is shared and actionable
Communities need access to relevant, usable information from traditional knowledge to scientific data to inform adaptive management.

Collaboration enables scale
Local action must link with other communities, networks, and national systems to scale impact, influence policy, and sustain change.