Danielle Ringer
University of Alaska Fairbanks
6 Papers
Danielle Ringer is an academic researcher from University of Alaska Fairbanks. The author has contributed to research in topics: Commercial fishing & Fishing. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Indigenous peoples and salmon stewardship: a critical relationship
Courtney Carothers,Jessica C. Black,Stephen J. Langdon,Rachel Donkersloot,Danielle Ringer,Jesse Coleman,Erika R. Gavenus,Wilson Justin,Michael Williams,Freddie Christiansen,Jonathan Samuelson,Carrie Stevens,Brooke Woods,S. Jeanette Clark,Patricia M. Clay,Liza Mack,Julie Raymond-Yakoubian,Andrea Akall'eq Sanders,Benjamin L. Stevens,Alex Whiting +19 more
TL;DR: In this article, a synthesis of what is known about diverse human-salmon relationships is presented, drawing on 865 published scientific studies; Indigenous knowledge; state, federal, and tribal data; archival materials; oral histories; and cross-cultural dialogs at working group meetings.
For generations to come? The privatization paradigm and shifting social baselines in Kodiak, Alaska's commercial fisheries
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored a key threat to fisheries sustainability in Alaska -the graying of the commercial fishing fleet, using a political ecology framework and mixed methods ethnography, including 70 semi-structured interviews and participant observation.
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Kin, community, and diverse rural economies: Rethinking resource governance for Alaska rural fisheries
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify social relationships and interdependencies as central to rural fishing communities and livelihoods and absent from the rational choice/individual economic actor assumptions of modern resource allocation and management regimes.
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Correction to: Alaska’s next generation of potential fishermen: a survey of youth attitudes towards fishing and community in Bristol Bay and the Kodiak Archipelago
Jesse Coleman,Courtney Carothers,Rachel Donkersloot,Danielle Ringer,Paula Cullenberg,Alexandra Bateman +5 more
TL;DR: For example, the authors found that positive attitudes about fishing were best predicted by student experience in the commercial fishing industry, whether the student wanted to be involved in fishing in the future, and the importance of subsistence fishing to the student's family.