Yoko Fujita’s research while affiliated with University of the Ryukyus and other places

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Publications (6)


Valuation of the selected marine management attributes
Details and levels for attributes
Socio-economic characteristics of survey respondents
Regression results for main effects specification
Valuation of the selected marine management attributes

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Impact of a local, coastal community based management regime when defining marine protected areas: Empirical results from a study in Okinawa, Japan
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2019

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185 Reads

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13 Citations

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Yoko Fujita

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There is a growing impetus to increase marine protected areas coverage globally from 6% to 30% in 2030. Successfully establishing and maintaining marine protected areas require incorporating public preferences into their establishment and management. We investigate the role of alternate management regimes (top-down and bottom-up) on preferences for marine protected areas and the marginal rate of substitution between natural and man-made capital using a case study in the Asia-Pacific region of Okinawa, Japan. We implemented a choice experiment survey to infer which attributes of marine protected areas are most important for the respondents. We use our survey results to calculate respondents’ willingness to support marine protected areas in Okinawa. This study contributes to the policy debate on management of marine protected areas with empirical data that characterizes the perception of Okinawan residents with respect to the role of local coastal communities (bottom-up) compared to central government based agencies (top-down) management. We extend the analysis and estimate the trade-offs to residents in Okinawa between natural capital (i.e. coral coverage and marine biodiversity attribute) and man-made capital (i.e. restrictions on coastal development). We find that the underlying management regime affects the local residents’ valuation of the marine protected area with residents showing a higher willingness to support bottom-up management regimes. There is also substantial differences in the willingness to support different characteristics of marine protected areas by management type. Finally, we find that the marginal rate of substitution between natural capital and man-made capital varies by management type such that residents would need to be compensated relatively less in terms of man-made capital in the presence of a policy scenario that proposes an increase in natural capital under a bottom-up management regime.

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S3 File

March 2019

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5 Reads

English Translation of Survey Questionnaire (centrally-managed MPA management regime). This pdf file provides an English translation of the centrally-managed MPA management regime survey document. In the translated version, we only include one choice scorecard. However, in the actual survey each respondent was provided with seven choice scorecards. (PDF)


Citations (2)


... These works necessarily target a sample of the broadest population that is reachable by researchers. The second form taken by experiments on marine areas is that in which valuation efforts are focused on local management issues, and the aims of such studies are to inform management decisions [16][17][18][19][20], to assess public preferences for management regimes before establishing a protected area [21], or to increase awareness about the relationship between the management process and the value of the environmental good [22]. Given the local emphasis of these research designs, samples are carefully crafted among smaller relevant populations that have some strict relationship with the area under study. ...

Reference:

Marine Sites and the Drivers of Wellbeing: Ecosystem vs. Anthropic Services
Preferences for marine protection in Okinawa: a comparison of management options and two groups of beneficiaries
  • Citing Chapter
  • February 2017

... In this regard, MPA management systems can broadly be classified into two main categories: a top-down approach with regulation and subsidies and a bottom-up approach with voluntary self-management by local people. Each approach has different characteristics and emphasizes different perspectives (Shah et al., 2019). Although top-down management is effective in rapidly expanding MPAs, it often causes conflicts and distrust among local people (Hu et al., 2020). ...

Impact of a local, coastal community based management regime when defining marine protected areas: Empirical results from a study in Okinawa, Japan