• Source: Northwest Atlantic Marine Alliance
    • Northwest Atlantic Marine Alliance (NAMA) is a non-profit organization that aims to restore and enhance an enduring marine system supporting a healthy diversity and an abundance of marine life and human uses through a self-organizing and self-governing organization.


      History


      NAMA was founded in 1995 in New England, United States. A small group of fishermen and fishing community advocates began exploring an alternative management structure, using the decentralized governance model successfully employed by BankAmericard in the 1960s when rebranding as Visa Inc. under the leadership of Dee Hock, VISA's founder and CEO Emeritus.
      In 1998, NAMA incorporated as an independent, non-profit organization focused on pursuing community based management to achieve its aims.
      Led by Captain Craig Pendleton, Peter Schelley and Jennifer Atkinson of Conservation Law Foundation, Mark Simonitch (commercial fisherman), Rollie Barnaby of University of New Hampshire and other advisors and participants, NAMA set out to perform collaborative research aimed at realizing community and ecosystem-based management.
      NAMA advocates for a collaborative process aimed at managing resources on a localized level, and not the entire U.S. eastern seaboard.


      See also


      Community supported fishery


      References


      "Article: Craig Pendleton, coordinating director of the Northwest Atlantic Marine Alliance (NAMA), a fisheries group from Saco, Maine, presented a check for $25,000 to Mississippi Department of Marine Resources (DMR) executive director William Walker at a ceremony last month in Gulfport.(People to Watch)". The Mississippi Business Journal. January 9, 2006. Retrieved 19 February 2010.


      External links


      NAMA website

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