Article

New cod war of words: 'Cod is God' versus 'sod the cod'-Two opposed discourses on the North Sea Cod Recovery Programme

Details

Citation

Gray T, Hatchard J, Daw T & Stead SM (2008) New cod war of words: 'Cod is God' versus 'sod the cod'-Two opposed discourses on the North Sea Cod Recovery Programme. Fisheries Research, 93 (2), pp. 1-7. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fishres.2008.04.009

Abstract
New insights into the North Sea Cod Recovery Programme (CRP), initiated in 2003 by the European Commission to reverse the long-term decline in cod stocks, are presented using discourse analysis. The main conservation measures taken under the CRP have been to reduce catch limits drastically and to increase control over vessels' fishing activities. There has been considerable controversy over the programme from its inception, with protagonists broadly divided into two discourses: (1) 'cod is God'-in which cod has assumed the status of the defining test of the European Union's (EU) resolve to manage fish stocks sustainably in EU waters; (2) 'sod the cod'-in which cod is regarded as one of a number of target commercial fish species, with no special status. Drawing on Frank Fischer's distinction between hegemonic and challenging discourses, we analyse the conflict between them at three levels: empirical; conceptual; and political. We consider moves to reconcile the two discourses in a policy consensus on a revised CRP, which suggest that the challenging discourse (sod-the-cod) has had some success in modifying the impact of the hegemonic discourse (cod-is-God)

Keywords
Cod; Cod recovery programme; Ecosystem-based approach; Fisheries management; Discourse analysis

Journal
Fisheries Research: Volume 93, Issue 2

StatusPublished
FundersNewcastle University
Publication date01/09/2008
Publication date online03/05/2008
Date accepted by journal28/04/2008
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/28662
ISSN0165-7836