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Fishing Wars and Environmental Change in Late Imperial and Modern China

TLDR
Zhang et al. as mentioned in this paper described migration, markets, and marine life under the late Qing under social organization and fishery regulation, 1800-1911 and developing the ocean: expansion and reform, 1904-1929.
Abstract
Abbreviations Introduction 1 Migration, Markets, and Marine Life Under the Late Qing 2 Social Organization and Fishery Regulation, 1800-1911 3 Developing the Ocean: Expansion and Reform, 1904-1929 4 Fishing Wars I: Sino-Japanese Disputes, 1924-1931 5 Fishing Wars II: The Cuttlefish Feud, 1932-1934 6 Fishing Wars III: The Zhejiang-Jiangsu Border Conflict, 1935-1945 Continuities and Discontinuities Chinese Characters Notes Works Cited Index

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Fisheries subsidies in China: Quantitative and qualitative assessment of policy coherence and effectiveness

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors examined China's fisheries policy coherence and found that about 95 percent of Chinese fisheries subsidies were harmful to sustainability, including fuel subsidies, and concluded that China's subsidies policies did not align with the country's stated goals in fisheries management.
Journal ArticleDOI

The State of the Field of Environmental History

TL;DR: The field of environmental history has been a hot topic in the field of history since 1970 as discussed by the authors, with the focus mainly on the work of professional historians, but because environmental history is pursued by many varieties of scholars, including archeologists, geographers, and others.
BookDOI

Historical perspectives of fisheries exploitation in the Indo-Pacific

TL;DR: The waters of the Indo-Pacific were at the centre of the global expansion of marine capture fisheries in the twentieth century, yet surprisingly little has been written about this subject from a historical perspective.
Book

A Concise History of Japan

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a chronology of the birth of the Yamato state, 14,500 BCE-710 CE and the courtly age, 710-1185.
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