Journal of the History of Biology
Latest Publications


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

1201
(FIVE YEARS 110)

H-INDEX

35
(FIVE YEARS 1)

Published By Springer-Verlag

1573-0387, 0022-5010

Author(s):  
Jane Maienschein ◽  
Garland E. Allen ◽  
Michael Dietrich ◽  
Everett Mendelsohn ◽  
Marsha Richmond ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Gregory Ferguson-Cradler

AbstractThis article looks at how fisheries biologists of the early twentieth century conceptualized and measured overfishing and attempted to make it a scientific object. Considering both theorizing and physical practices, the essay shows that categories and understandings of both the fishing industry and fisheries science were deeply and, at times, inextricably interwoven. Fish were both scientific and economic objects. The various models fisheries science used to understand the world reflected amalgamations of biological, physical, economic, and political factors. As a result, scientists had great difficulty stabilizing the concept of overfishing and many influential scholars into the 1930s even doubted the coherence of the concept. In light of recent literature in history of fisheries and environmental social sciences that critiques the infiltration of political and economic imperatives into fisheries and environmental sciences more generally, this essay highlights both how early fisheries scientists understood their field of study as the entire combination of interactions between political, economic, biological and physical factors and the work that was necessary to separate them.


Author(s):  
Ricardo Francisco Waizbort ◽  
Maurício Roberto Motta Pinto da Luz ◽  
Flavio Coelho Edler ◽  
Helio Ricardo da Silva

Author(s):  
Ricardo Francisco Waizbort ◽  
Maurício Roberto Motta Pinto da Luz ◽  
Flavio Coelho Edler ◽  
Helio Ricardo da Silva

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document