Resilient communities ? Collapse and recovery of a social-ecological system in Arctic Norway

Fisheries-dependent Sami communities in the Norwegian Arctic face major challenges adapting and responding to socialecological changes. On a local scale, communities and households continually adapt and respond to interacting changes in natural conditions and governance frameworks. Degradation of the marine environment and decline in coastal settlements can move socialecological systems beyond critical thresholds or tipping points, where the system irreversibly enters a different state. We examined the recent social-ecological history of 2 fjords in Finnmark, North Norway, which have coped, over the past 30 years, with the collapse of local fish stocks, harp seal (Pagophilus groenlandicus) and red king crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) invasions, and increasingly restrictive resource management regimes. Further, we explored similarities and differences in their social-ecological histories and discuss how the concepts of resilience and tipping points can be applied as analytical tools in empirical studies of community response to socialecological change. We show that although the ecological changes in the 2 communities have consisted of similar developments, they have been temporally different in ways that may have affected coping strategies and influenced the available options at different times. The apparent resilience of Sami fishing communities can be understood as the result of response strategies employed by communities and households, and the economic opportunities that have opened up as a result of a combination of ecological change and institutional and political reforms.


INTRODUCTION
According to the Arctic Human Development Report (2004), Arctic societies have a well-deserved reputation for resilience in the face of change.However, what exactly constitutes social resilience in these societies and why some of them are more resilient than others are open questions.Response capabilities of human systems in the face of short-and long-term socialecological changes depend on the capacity of a system to absorb disturbance and reorganize while undergoing change (Folke 2006).We examine the recent social-ecological histories of two coastal Sami communities to discuss how communities respond to changes in ecosystems and governance systems.Ecological and institutional parameters define feasible response strategies, as well as the success of such strategies.An assessment of the ability of communities to successfully cope with these changes, in terms of being able to sustain local fisheries and secure the survival of basic local institutions, is one way to measure social resilience, defined as the capacity to change to maintain identity (Carmack et al. 2012).The communities included in the case studies are situated within a social-ecological system that has gone through dramatic changes in the past three decades: the fisheries communities in Porsáŋgu/Porsanger fjord and Várjat vuotna/Varanger fjord in Finnmark, the northernmost county of Norway.If these changes are irreversible, it is reasonable to assume that they have already stretched the adaptive capacity of the ecological system beyond its limits and moved the system beyond a tipping point into a different state (cf.Wassmann andLenton 2012, Young 2012).In some cases, however, social systems can adapt, or even benefit, from such changes.
Instead of identifying, as many modeling exercises do, proxy indicators for social resilience and potential tipping points, we look into the adaptive strategies employed by actors and institutions within the communities in response to social-ecological change.The changes in the two communities consisted of similar events that were temporally different in ways that affected the response options available to the communities at different times.
Communities respond to ecological change with different coping and adaptation strategies, but their available options are dependent on interactions between these changes and social structures, writ large.Recovery of an ecosystem does not automatically lead to recovery of a resource-based social system, as exemplified by cases where ecosystem crisis is met by institutional reforms that allow for privatization of use rights and, as a consequence, the benefits from the resources are taken over by nonlocal actors.
Ecological changes that occur within a fjord system are likely to be part of ecological processes happening on a larger geographical scale; marine stocks migrate and fluctuate within a larger habitat and are affected by ecological events outside the fjord system.The same applies to social change: local fisheries are affected by global markets and technological innovations, as well as by resource governance at local, regional, national, or international scales.
We draw up a framework for analysis of community responses to social-ecological changes that includes the connections, over the shorter and longer term, between governance at different levels and adaptive strategies.We also identify changes in the marine ecology in the two fjords and the interactions between ecological and governance changes that have taken place there since the 1980s, as well as the different consequences of those interactions for the fisheries in the two communities.Finally, we discuss whether this type of analysis brings us closer to an understanding of how resilience is constituted in the case-study communities and whether the social-ecological system of which the communities are a part has passed a tipping point and entered a new state.

METHODS
We have used data from our previous research supplemented by findings from other published studies.The primary data on ecological changes and fisheries in Porsáŋgu are derived from 18 interviews with fishers/members of fishing households in 2008-2010, as a part of the "Fávllis" project (Andersen and Persen 2011).The interviews were conducted by Svanhild Andersen, Camilla Brattland, and Kalstad in 1993-1995(Kalstad et al. 2011) and 2 interviews with municipal employees in Unjárga in 2005 by Eythórsson as a part of the project "Coastal Sami Landscapes" (Eythórsson 2008).Supplementary information was drawn from 12 interviews with local people in Unjárga in 2010 by Eythórsson as a part of a survey on historical land use for the Finnmark Commission.Although these interviews were directed toward different questions, they are useful as an update on the development in Unjárga compared with the information from Kalstad's interviews from the 1990s.Secondary data are derived from databases on fisheries statistics held by the Directorate of Fisheries ( 2014

THEORETICAL APPROACH
The concepts of resilience, adaptive capacity, and tipping points are widely applied in analyses of biophysical systems and ecosystems.Whether a human community is resilient, and holds a high degree of adaptive capacity, concerns the social dynamics within communities and how they relate to the larger society.In Folke's view (2006), resilience should be understood as an ability to innovate and transform, rather than merely to achieve relative stability while absorbing external shocks.Tipping points are understood as thresholds that constitute a point of no return in the behavior of complex, dynamic systems.Identification of tipping points in advance of their occurrence may be difficult in complex systems, but, once reached, the system will experience significant change(s) that can be documented (Wassmann andLenton 2012, Young 2012).For example, in an ecosystem in which important species have been depleted to the point where they disappear from the system, a change of state has occurred, as happened when cod was depleted on the Grand Banks, leaving room for other species to take its place.The introduction of an invasive species to a system may also change its composition irreversibly, giving way to a different state.Such changes are seldom fully reversible because the chances of a system returning more or less precisely to some pre-existing state are small.How local communities respond to abrupt changes over the short and long run will depend on the options that are available and considered relevant under given political, economic, and ecological circumstances.The severity of the consequences of abrupt changes in social-ecological systems, and the ability to adapt, may depend on the timing of ecosystem changes in relation to institutional changes such as fisheries governance reforms.Ecological and institutional changes are not necessarily irreversible; in some cases, local action can modify their outcomes.In other cases, communities run out of options as they face enduring crisis and pass a critical threshold beyond which they are no longer viable as resource-dependent communities.Perry et al. (2011) distinguish between "coping" strategies occurring on the short timescale, allowing for a relatively quick return to previous conditions, and "adaptive" strategies that occur on longer timescales and require more permanent adjustments.Adaptive strategies at the community level are likely to involve a diversity of interactions of local actors with regional and national networks to mobilize resources beyond the community itself.Chapin et al. (2006) have labeled economic diversification strategies on the household level, such as combining several parttime jobs within the cash sector of the economy with resource harvesting, which is not uncommon in the Arctic region, as characteristic of social and economic resilience.In the case of coastal Sami, Nilsen (1998) notes that, with the help of flexible, mixed-economy household strategies based on long-standing Sami tradition, fjord communities like Porsáŋgu and Ivgu/ Lyngen in Troms County were remarkably adaptable to resource fluctuation in the 1980s.From this perspective, community responses can be understood as the sum of the coping strategies of individual households.A functional community is, however, more than the sum of its households and can potentially act collectively through institutions like municipal councils, political parties, voluntary associations, private companies, and cooperatives.Such institutions are connected to political, economic, and civil society networks, such as management institutions, branch organizations, and funding agencies.Subsequently, we approach the two fjords as distinct socialecological subsystems, showing that changes in these subsystems had specific local characteristics.Successful adaptive strategies may be the result of local actions, but they also depend on which options are available for local actors at the moment of change.
The strategies by which communities respond to social-ecological change (cf.Perry et al. 2011) can be classified according to temporal and spatial scales (Table 1): 1. Coping strategies, local scale, e.g., diversification by individual households.
For our purposes, coping is defined as shorter term responses over periods up to 10 years.Adaptation is understood as longer term responses with a time horizon of more than 10 years.The analysis is based on the assumption that social resilience and adaptive capacity of the case communities can be explained as the result of strategies employed by a range of actors in response to ecological change and governance change.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss3/art1/

The communities
We refer to the rural coast settlements within the municipalities of Porsáŋgu and Unjárga as "communities."The two case-study communities are located in fjord areas with predominantly coastal Sami populations.In general, the fisheries in these areas have been in steep decline since the 1980s, a development that is usually attributed to two critical events: the "seal invasion" in the 1980s and the introduction of vessel quotas in 1990.By comparing the development and outcomes of the fisheries crisis in these apparently similar communities, we examine how the timing and duration of ecological changes and governance changes, as well as the response strategies by local actors to these changes, constitute resilience in these communities.
Unjárga is a municipality located in the inner part of Várjat vuotna in east Finnmark, close to the Russian border.The current population is ∼900 people, predominantly of Sami origin.In the 1900 census, 80% of the population was registered as Sami, 7% of Finnish origin, and 13% Norwegian.In 2009, 54% of the adult population was registered as voters for the SP.The settlements in Unjárga are scattered along the coastline.
Porsáŋgu is a large fjord in central Finnmark.The municipality of Porsáŋgu includes the coastal settlements along the fjord as well as some inland settlements and the municipal center, Leavnja/Lakselv.The population of the municipality is currently ∼4300 people of mixed ethnic origin.In the 1900 census, 48% of the population was registered as Sami, 36% of Finnish origin, and 16% Norwegian.In 2009, 24% of the adult population was registered as voters for the SP.
Both municipalities are defined as a part of the Sami settlement area, and all inhabitants in this area have, without consideration of ethnic origin, equal opportunity to apply for financial support from the SP and to benefit from policies targeting the Sami settlement area.Historically, the coastal settlements in both fjords have been dependent on marine resources, in combination with animal husbandry, harvesting of terrestrial and freshwater resources, and seasonal waged labor.In both communities, the number of residents has gradually decreased since the 1970s, the average age is rising, and the number of children and young adults is falling.Several primary schools have been closed down during the past decade, and the same is true of grocery stores and fish processing plants, important institutions in every coastal community.Judging from these demographic indicators, we might infer that these communities are heading toward final closure, i.e., that they might already be past the tipping point for survival.

Ecological changes in the fjord systems
The coastal settlements in Unjárga and Porsáŋgu have experienced significant changes in the fjord ecosystems during the past three decades, including (1) in-migration of harp seals (Pagophilus groenlandicus) from the Arctic Ocean, (2) the disappearance of coastal/fjord cod (Gadus morhua) from its usual spawning sites, (3) the depletion of kelp forests as a result of increased populations of sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis), and (4) in-migration of an alien marine species, the red king crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus).Historical evidence shows that variability in the abundance of fish and other marine resources seems to be a characteristic of these fjord ecosystems; availability of marine resources has fluctuated in seemingly unpredictable cycles.
These four events have occurred in both fjords, but not simultaneously.In 1979, an "invasion" of the Finnmark fjords by a large number of harp seals started in Várjat vuotna and was followed by a total disappearance of cod from the fjord.In the following years, the seals spread westward and reached Porsáŋgu in 1987.In 1989, the harp seals are reported to have left both fjords simultaneously.There is uncertainty about the role of human impact in these events, but marine scientists consider it likely that the depletion of capelin (Mallotus villosus) and cod in the Barents Sea caused a food shortage for the seals, triggering their mass migration to the Finnmark coast.On the other hand, sudden influxes of harp seals in Várjat vuotna are known to have occurred several times in the 19th century, apparently as a result of natural fluctuations unrelated to human impact (Kalstad et al. 2011).
The disappearance of cod from local spawning sites is a wellknown phenomenon in Finnmark (Fig. 1), and local fishermen usually explain it as an effect of excessive fishing by Danish seiners on local cod populations, especially since the 1960s (Eythórsson 1998b, Maurstad andSundet 1998).Coastal cod is referred to by marine biologists as a specific stock, or a stock complex, separate from Northeast Arctic (NEA) cod (G.morhua), and consisting of a number of distinct populations.If local cod populations are too depleted, the change may prove irreversible, but there have been some examples of cod returning to abandoned spawning sites in the fjords.In the case of Várjat vuotna, cod returned in 1989, after 10 years of absence; in Porsáŋgu, cod have been absent for 25 years, and only 1 of the spawning sites has barely started to recover (Smiervuotna/Smørfjord).It remains to be seen if cod will ever return to the other spawning sites (Billávuotna/Billefjord and Leaibevuotna/Olderfjord) in the fjord.The coastal cod stock complex has been dramatically reduced since the 1980s and has been listed as severely threatened since 2006 (Artsdatabanken 2006).
An explosive increase in the population of sea urchins, followed by a related depletion of kelp forests, has occurred in large areas along the Norwegian coast since the 1980s, including the two casestudy fjords (Sivertsen 2006).There is little knowledge about the causes of this change or its reversibility.Kelp forests are known to be important habitat for juvenile cod and other fish, and their depletion is likely to have a negative impact on recruitment to local cod populations.In recent years (2008)(2009)(2010)(2011)(2012), fishermen in Várjat vuotna have noticed a gradual recovery of kelp forests, whereas in Porsáŋgu little recovery has yet been reported.Except for the introduction of red king crab, the ecological changes described previously may be reversible in the long term.
In the case of Várjat vuotna, cod fisheries recovered 10 years after the collapse in 1979, and kelp forests seem to be recovering.In Porsáŋgu, however, the ecosystem has not yet recovered; 2.5 decades after the cod collapse, it remains to be seen whether it will recover to pre-1987 levels.In any case, it can be argued that the introduction of red king crab, which is now a dominant species in Várjat and Porsáŋgu, has irreversibly changed these fjord ecosystems, implying that they have passed a critical threshold to move into a new ecological state.

Changes in fisheries governance
From the 1980s to the present, the fisheries in both communities have been directly or indirectly affected by several governance changes, ranging from large-scale reform to policies targeting certain species or regions.The motivations for policy changes and reforms have been diverse: response to ecological change, resource protection, improved economic efficiency of the fishery, or political pressure from interest groups.A general assessment of how changes in fisheries governance have affected the fjord communities during the past three decades is beyond our scope.Instead, we have selected three distinct governance changes that are likely to have had an impact on local fisheries in Várjat vuotna and Porsáŋgu: (1) the introduction of individual vessel quotas (IVQs) for the coastal fleet ( 1990), ( 2) the development of a new management regime for red king crab (2002)(2003)(2004)(2005)(2006)(2007)(2008), and (3) the introduction of governance measures focusing on the Sami as an indigenous group .By examining how these governance changes, in interaction with ecological changes, have shaped the options that have been available for local actors at different times, we can evaluate their impact on the social resilience of the two fisheries communities.

The effects of individual vessel quotas
The introduction of IVQs into Norwegian coastal fisheries in 1990 came as a response to a serious decline of the NEA cod stock.Quota allocation was based on vessel catches for the previous three years.In districts that had experienced seal invasions during these years, the result was that very few fishers initially qualified for IVQs.Those who did not qualify had an option to continue as part-time fishers in an "open group fishery."Fishers in the open group were allowed to catch a very limited amount of cod provided that they met certain requirements, such as an upper limit for income from other sources.
The crisis in the cod fisheries came at the same time as the establishment of the SP, which immediately became an important advocate for Sami fishers.As a result, the conditions for part-time fishers in Sami districts were somewhat improved compared to the initial situation in 1990.Although the decline in the fisheries in Sami districts after 1990 is often attributed to the introduction of IVQs, the development in terms of the number of fishers in the two communities from 1988 to 1995 indicates that the picture is not that simple.
As Figure 2   Recently, however, development has moved in another direction.As shown in Figure 2, between 2010 and 2012 the number of fishers in both categories increased in both fjords, reversing the earlier trends and showing a marked deviation from the trend in the Finnmark region as a whole.Porsáŋgu had the largest increase during these 2 years, i.e., 14 full-time fishers (+70%) and 10 parttime fishers (+166%), and the fishery in Unjárga increased by 7 full-time fishers (+38%) and 6 part-time fishers (+60%).In Finnmark as a whole, there was an increase in full-time fishers (+9%), whereas the number of part-time fishers was reduced (−6%).Overall, between 1988 and 2012, the total number of fishers has increased in Unjárga, whereas in Porsáŋgu the total number in 2012 was still < 50% of the 1988 number.
It appears then that, contrary to received wisdom, the closing of the fishing commons by the introduction of IVQs in 1990 did not cause an immediate fall in the number of fishers in Unjárga and Porsáŋgu, nor has the IVQ regime prevented the recent increase in the number of fishers in these communities.The most likely explanation of the different pattern of development in the two communities during the 1990s is the difference in the availability of fish and king crab in the two fjords.In Unjárga the recovery of cod, combined with an influx of king crab, created optimism and a renewed interest in the fisheries in the 1990s; whereas in Porsáŋgu, the decline in resource availability continued throughout the 1990s.As discussed subsequently, the explanation of the sudden increase in the number of fishers in both communities since 2010 may be found in local actors' responses to a combination of ecological and governance factors.

The management regime for red king crab
When red king crab first turned up in Norwegian waters, i.e., in Várjat vuotna, in the early 1990s, it was considered a pest; it got tangled in gill nets and caused economic losses for the fishers.
Because Russia initially claimed ownership of the stock, a commercial crab fishery was not allowed until 2002.However, from 1994 to 2001, some fishers in Unjárga and the neighboring communities were allowed to engage in a "research fishery," which generated considerable income for the fishers (Jørgensen and Nilssen 2011).In Porsáŋgu, the crab fishery did not start until 2005.
The government allowed the development of a new commercial fishery starting in 2002 that, in the absence of existing traditions and vested interests, included certain fisheries management innovations.In principle, red king crab is an alien species to be kept out of Norwegian waters at all costs.However, fishers in eastern Finnmark have realized the considerable income potential of the fishery, and, as a compromise, commercial fishing has been allowed in a zone east of Davvinjárga/North Cape, whereas only "catch for the purpose of elimination" is allowed in other areas.As red king crab is considered a pest for the traditional cod fishery, a compensation principle was applied in the first allocation of crab quota: only fishers who had caught and delivered a certain quantity of cod in eastern Finnmark could apply for it.As coastal cod was in short supply in the fjords, this rule was unfavorable to small-scale fjord fishers, and many of them were unable to qualify.In 2008, however, after pressure from small-scale fishers, voiced through the SP and the coastal Sami fisheries association "Bivdi," established in 2005, all open group small-scale fishing vessels (i.e., < 11 m length) that were registered in the "commercial zone" east of Davvinjárga/North Cape were allowed to participate (Ministry of Fisheries and Coastal Affairs 2013a).
The management regime for king crab is thus fundamentally different from that of all other fisheries in Norway: it means that small-scale fishers operating in the open group, who are residents in the "commercial zone," have exclusive access to the fishery.The Norwegian Fishermen's Association initially criticized the arrangement as discriminatory but has now more or less accepted it as an exception to the general rule of equal access to the fishery, irrespective of residence (Norwegian Fishermen's Association 2013).As shown in Figure 3, catches of red king crab have provided a substantial source of income for the Sami small-scale fisheries in the fjords east of Davvinjárga.Moreover, fishing for red king crab and cod can easily be combined, as the fishing seasons are different.
The "invasion" of red king crab, combined with a governance innovation, i.e., the management regime of 2008 that favors smallscale fishers, seems to be the most important reason for the apparent revival of the fjord fisheries in Unjárga and Porsáŋgu since 2010.
The case of red king crab in eastern Finnmark shows that even if the effects of irreversible ecological changes are diverse and generally regarded as unwanted, in some cases such changes also represent new opportunities for local communities.

The role of the Sami Parliament in fisheries governance
The SP has had an impact on fisheries governance and the conditions for local fishing communities through financial support and political initiatives.The SP came into existence in 1989, at a time of crisis in the cod fisheries.The fisheries crisis in coastal Sami districts became one of its first core issues (Eythórsson 1998a).The SP soon gained status as a legitimate voice for the concerns of Sami small-scale fishers, a marginalized group within the Norwegian Fishermen's Association (Eythórsson 2003, Brattland 2012).The parliament has been engaged in a long-term political struggle to secure fishing rights and access to the fishery for Sami fishers, and, although the results of the SPs initiatives to reform fisheries policies during the past 20 years have been modest, some progress has been made, as the new management regime for red king crab demonstrates.Since 1990, several reports have been filed on the situation of Sami fishers and Sami indigenous fishing rights.The most recent one, the report of the Coastal Fisheries Commission (CFC), proposed far-reaching fisheries governance reforms in Finnmark (CFC 2008).The CFC proposed to the Ministry of Fisheries and Coastal Affairs that based on a combination of indigenous rights and traditional use rights of the coastal population, a general right to fish for a reasonable livelihood should apply to all residents in coastal Finnmark, either as a full-time occupation or in combination with other income (Jentoft andBrattland 2011, Lätsch 2012).
The ministry did not accept this recommendation.Although it accepted in principle that indigenous rights might apply to the traditional coastal Sami districts, it was not willing to discuss a new institutional framework that would secure Sami participation in fisheries governance in Finnmark, as proposed by the CFC.Instead, the ministry offered certain changes in the fisheries regulations within coastal Sami districts, including an additional cod quota for part-time fishers in these districts and an upper size limit (15 m length) for fishing vessels allowed to operate inside the fjord lines (Ministry of Fisheries andCoastal Affairs 2010, 2011).
According to the 2006 consultation agreement between the SP and the Norwegian government, grounded in International Labour Organization Convention 169 on Indigenous and Tribal Peoples in Independent Countries, the SP has a right to be consulted on all matters of importance for the Sami.In 2010, the SP carried out consultations with the Ministry of Fisheries and Coastal Affairs on the proposal from the CFC.As a compromise, the cod quota allocated to small-scale, open group fishers within the SP subsidy schemes for business development (STN area) was increased, providing improved opportunities for livelihoods based on cod fisheries, combined with other sources of income.The STN is the core area of Sami settlement in Norway and is the target area for special policy measures, governed by the SP.In 2013, for example, the cod quota for each open group vessel up to 11 m in length within the STN area was considerably higher than for the same category of fishers outside the area, a situation that evoked heated discussions among fishers outside the STN (Grytøyr 2013).In addition, an advisory committee, with some Sami representation, for fjord fisheries was to be established.A majority of SP representatives voted in favor of this compromise, a decision strongly contested among many coastal Sami.A large minority within the SP voted against it, arguing that the concessions offered by the ministry were too small and could easily be withdrawn by future governments.
The SP also distributes investment funds within the STN area.
Inhabitants of this area can apply for investment support, i.e., grants and loans, for small-scale enterprises, including small fishing vessels (Ministry of Labor 1996).Unjárga and Porsáŋgu are included in the STN area, and both communities have actively utilized these opportunities (Nygaard and Skålnes 2007).According to Oddleif Nilsen, an employee of the municipal administration in Unjárga (interviewed by E. Eythórsson in 2004), during the 1990s, funds from the SP and municipal funds were applied strategically to reestablish a fishing fleet in Unjárga after a decade with very little fishing activity in the Varanger fjord.
As indicated by the figures quoted previously, these efforts were quite successful.In recent years, the SP has also made a number of fisheries-related allocations to Unjárga and Porsáŋgu.In the period 2002-2010, 10 fishery-related allocations went to Unjárga, and 28 of the same category went to Porsáŋgu.Nineteen of these 38 allocations were used to finance shares in fishing vessels (John Osvald Grønmo, SP administration, unpublished data).The contribution of this funding to the recent increase in the number of fishers in coastal Sami districts has been underlined in several media reports.For example, in 2013, 2 young Sami fishers interviewed by Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK) Sápmi Radio praised the financial support from the SP as well as other recent changes in fisheries management (NRK Sápmi 2013a, b).http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss3/art1/Regardless of the Norwegian government's failure to accept the CFC's conclusions regarding indigenous fishing rights, there is reason to believe that the sum of governance changes invoked by SP fisheries policies since 1989, investment support for the smallscale fleet, improved access to the cod and red king crab fishery for open group fishers, and better resource protection within the fjord areas through prohibition of fishing with active gear inside the fjord lines have had a significant impact on the fisheries in Unjárga and Porsáŋgu and contributed to the recent rise in the number of fishers.This is clearly demonstrated in the recent increase in catch value, from red king crab and cod, for fishing vessels from Unjárga and Porsáŋgu, shown in Figures 3 and 4.

Coping strategies and options
We have proposed that social resilience at the community level is generated by the responses of local actors to social-ecological change.Using the recent social-ecological history of two fjords as a point of departure, we have described a set of ecological and governance changes that have affected the available response options for these communities.Their subsequent development in the two cases has many similarities, but also significant differences.In particular, the timing of ecological changes has been different; ecological events have co-occurred with governance events in a different fashion in the two fjords.Consequently, the response options available at the time of change were different.
Short-term coping strategies aim at preserving the status quo, allowing the community to "ride out the storm."In coastal communities, the traditional way of coping with poor fishing seasons is diversification, reliance on subsistence selfemployment, and seeking employment in other sectors (cf. Perry et al. 2011).When cod started to return to Várjat vuotna in the 1990s, the IVQ system had left the fishers in Unjárga without any individual quota.Despite this, their fisheries had recovered by the end of the 1990s, and a considerable small-scale fishing fleet was re-established in the area.The municipality of Unjárga followed an active strategy for rebuilding the local fishery by offering grants and inexpensive credit for investment in vessels and quota, in combination with SP funds, and by funding the development of of fisheries infrastructure.During the 1990s, red king crab gradually became a source of income for Unjárga fishers, and, because the cod had returned, the traditional cod fishery could now be combined with the new crab fishery.In Porsáŋgu, the options in the 1990s were different.With a cod crisis starting in the period from 1987 to 1989 and with no alternative commercial species available in the fjord, municipal support and SP funds could not effectively maintain the local fishery until red king crab turned up in 2005.A community strategy that worked effectively in Unjárga did not work in Porsáŋgu because of ecological restraints (Andersen and Persen 2011).
On a national scale, there were certain adjustments of IVQ allocations in the fjord districts in late 1990, and, in the following years, some minor changes were made to ease the situation of open group fishers within the Sami settlement area.These adjustments produced more predictable annual catches for each vessel and higher upper limits of allowable income from other sources for the part-time fishers within the STN area (Ministry of Labour 1996).After 2000, alarming assessments of the situation of the coastal cod stock complex led to new protective measures; namely, fjord lines were introduced in 2004, prohibiting Danish seine fishing in the fjords.Although initially a temporary measure to protect coastal cod (Fiskeridirektoratet 2003), the fjord lines were confirmed as a part of an agreement between the SP and the government in 2011.After the 2013 election, there was a change of government in Norway.Despite the agreement with the SP, the new minister of fisheries has started to hollow out the arrangement for the fjord lines, which could be regarded as a response to larger vessels' interests and pressure from national fisheries organizations (cf.Ministry of Fisheries and Coastal Affairs 2013b).These signals indicate that measures taken to protect small-scale fisheries interests can easily be reversed as a result of changed political priorities.However, the minister admits there needs to be dialogue with the SP before changes can be made in northern fjords where the Sami interests are more significant (Ministry of Fisheries and Coastal Affairs 2013b).However, continuation of these measures depends on political willingness to protect the distinctive small-scale fisheries in these fjords.Thus, they remain coping strategies without a substantial degree of predictability as long as they are lacking a legal foundation along the lines of the CFC recommendation.

Long-term adaptive strategies
Building on his study of household adaptations conducted in two coastal Sami districts during a fisheries crisis in the 1980s, Nilsen (1998)  Market access, in terms of opportunities for the delivery of fresh fish within a reasonable distance from the fishing grounds in the fjords, has increasingly become a limiting factor for the fjord fisheries during the past two decades.To address the problem of access to fish buyers, the Norwegian Fishermen's Sales Organisation (see Norges Råfisklag 2013), local fishers' organizations, the SP, and the municipalities have supported the development of local delivery stations in the coastal Sami districts.However, local delivery stations depend on larger fish processing companies to buy the catches.With an increasing degree of absentee ownership of the fish processing industry and an abundance of raw fish in the market, deliveries of small quantities from the fjords are not necessarily of much interest to the large processing companies (Traelvik 2011;G. Grytås, unpublished manuscript).As an illustration of the role that the SP can play in contributing to political reforms that address the situation of Sami, and other fishers, the council of the SP has recently raised this issue in a meeting with the minister of fisheries (Kyst og fjord 2013).
The relative success experienced by local actors, in terms of engaging Sami and Norwegian institutions in the issues of coastal Sami livelihoods and access to the fishery for small-scale fishermen in the fjords, reflects a general change in the political influence of the Sami in Norwegian society during the past three decades (Broderstad 2008).The SP's support program for business development is also an example of an institutional and political strategy in support of traditional fisheries as a source of local livelihoods.In sum, it is likely that SP involvement, in the form of economic support and engagement in fisheries policies, has played a major role in preventing the complete elimination of small-scale fisheries from these fjords.Without this involvement, the fisheries in these communities might have passed a politicaleconomic tipping point and ceased to exist.

CONCLUSION
We set out to explore the dynamic potential of the resilience concept, by applying it to an analysis of social-ecological change in two coastal Sami communities.Our approach was inspired by Folke (2006:260), who emphasizes that "the resilience approach is concerned with how to persist through continuous development in the face of change and how to innovate and transform into new more desirable configurations."The two fjords have experienced substantial ecological changes that may be characterized as a change of state.The configuration of the fjord systems has changed because of disparate processes: the disappearance of coastal cod from spawning sites, the depletion of kelp forests, and the introduction of an alien species, the red king crab.Combined with changes in fisheries governance, the arrival of red king crab has opened up a new livelihood option for fishers, resulting in a transformation of the fishery that has been beneficial for the communities.Odd as it may seem, an irreversible change in the ecosystem has contributed positively to the reorganization and resilience of the social-ecological system.
We have also described the interaction between ecological change and governance change, including how coping and adaptive strategies are employed in response to unpredictable socialecological changes.The objective of our analysis of the two cases has been to integrate the tools of social science into a resilience perspective.Folke et al. (2005:462) note that "this challenge [the integration of social science] involves linking a broad range of actors at multiple scales to deal with the interrelated dynamics of resources and ecosystems, management systems and social systems as well as uncertainty, unpredictability, and surprise."The task of integrating ecological and social factors in the analysis of resilience is demanding because it requires control of multiple biological and social variables.What can be achieved by using this mode of multidisciplinary analysis is a deeper and more complete understanding of the dynamics that arise at the community level as a result of interaction between biological and social elements within a social-ecological system.
However, what does the analysis tell us about community resilience?Does it imply that coastal Sami communities in general are inherently resilient, or that Unjárga is more resilient than Porsáŋgu?By studying the local effects of ecological change, in combination with fisheries policies and changes in power relations between the Norwegian state and the Sami, for each of these communities, we have found two slightly different varieties of response by local actors within the coastal Sami fisheries when struck by resource decline and negative effects of the 1990 IVQ system.We have also shown that, although the severity and duration of ecological changes in the two fjords have differed, both communities have quickly responded to new opportunities arising from ecological change in the form of cod recovery and the arrival of red king crab.However, these opportunities would not have been available without modifications to the fisheries management regime, such as larger and more predictable catch quotas for open group fishers, the introduction of fjord lines that exclude large vessels and active fishing gear from the fjords, and, in particular, a new management regime for red king crab in 2008 that favors local, small-scale fishers.In most cases, these modifications are specifically targeted toward Sami settlement areas and have come about more or less as a result of political pressure by the SP, which has also contributed financially to renewal of the fisheries in these areas.The apparent resilience of Sami fishing communities is thus closely connected to stronger political representation of the coastal Sami through the SP since 1989.The question of whether the two communities, or the social-http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss3/art1/ecological systems of which they are a part, would have passed a tipping point without that political representation remains hypothetical.In the case of the coastal Sami in Norway, the continued viability and resilience of the fisheries-dependent communities is not only a function of social-ecological dynamics on the local level, but also depends on the political willingness on the level of national policies to support the distinctive small-scale fishery in Sami coastal areas.

Fig. 1 .
Fig. 1.Porsáηgu and Várjat vuotna are two of the major fjord areas in Finnmark County.The map shows spawning grounds for Northeast Arctic cod (Gadus morhua), coastal cod, and depleted spawning grounds for coastal cod, based on interviews with 70 fishers in 1996, by social scientist Anita Maurstad and marine biologist Jan H. Sundet (Maurstad and Sundet 1998).
shows, between 1988 and 1995, the number of fulltime fishers in Porsáŋgu declined by 30%, from 68 to 48, and the number of part-time fishers only slightly declined, from 38 to 34.In contrast, in Unjárga the number of full-time fishers increased by 9%, from 19 to 21, and the number of part-time fishers increased by 125%, from 16 to 36.In Finnmark as a whole, the number of full-time fishers was reduced by 26%, from 2.222 to 1.650, whereas the number of part-time fishers increased by 9%, from 701 to 765.The development in Porsáŋgu was thus slightly more negative than the average, whereas Unjárga was doing much better than the average.During the following decade, from 1995 to 2005, the number of fishers declined in both fjords, but most dramatically in Porsáŋgu.In Unjárga, the number of full-time fishers went down 19%, from 21 to 17, and part-time fishers were reduced by 80%, from 36 to 7. In Porsáŋgu, full-time fishers were reduced by 48%, from 48 to 25, and part-time fishers went down 74%, from 34 to 9.The steep decline in numbers of fishermen in the 2 fjords from 1995 to 2005 is probably related to the poor condition of coastal cod and a government-sponsored buyout program aimed at reducing the size of the small-scale fleet.While the buyout program was in operation(2002)(2003)(2004)(2005)(2006)(2007)(2008)(2009), 98 vessels from Finnmark County, all < 15 m in length, were permanently removed from the fishery (Ministry ofFisheries and Coastal Affairs 2009).The decrease in the number of fishers and fishing vessels from 1995 http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss3/art1/ to 2005 may partially be explained as a long-term effect of IVQs, but other factors, such as ecosystem conditions and the previously mentioned buyout program for small-scale fishing vessels, are also important.During the same period, the number of full-time fishers in Finnmark as a whole went down 32%, from 1.650 to 1.112, and the number of part-time fishers was reduced by 41%, from 765 to 454.Again, Porsáŋgu came out below the average in both categories, and the reduction in full-time fishers in Unjárga was much less than the average.Both communities experienced a massive reduction in the number of part-time fishers.

Fig. 3 .
Fig. 3. King crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) catch (in 1000 Norwegian kroner) landed by vessels below 11 m from Porsáηgu and Unjárga, in the period 2000-2012.Municipalities of landings are all over Finnmark, but most of the catch is landed in the vessels' home municipality or close by.Source: Directorate of Fisheries (2014).

Fig. 4 .
Fig. 4. Deliveries of cod (in 1000 Norwegian kroner) landed by vessels below 11 m from Porsáηgu and Unjárga in the period 2000-2012.Municipalities of landings are all over Finnmark, but most of the catch is landed in the vessels' home municipality or close by.Source: Directorate of Fisheries (2014).
Steinar Nilsen (Centre for Sami Studies) and Einar Eythórsson (Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research), in collaboration with the Coastal Sami Resource Centre in Porsáŋgu.The data from Unjárga/Nesseby in Várjat vuotna were derived from 38 interviews with active and retired fishers on fisheries history and ecological change conducted by the late Johan Albert

Table 1 .
Temporal and spatial aspects of community responses to social-ecological change.
suggested that flexible adaptations are a long-standing cultural adaptation of coastal Sami communities, based on their extensive experience with fluctuating fjord environments.Provided this is still a relevant attribute of coastal Sami http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss3/art1/communities, it can be understood as a long-term adaptive strategy of these communities.The quick recovery of the fjord fisheries in Unjárga after 1990 was remarkable, and in Porsáŋgu there has been a rapid recovery since 2010.The swift response to a more favorable social-ecological environment seems to indicate the presence of adaptive capacity and resilience, which is remarkable considering the aging population and the decades of gradual decline of these communities, especially Porsáŋgu (Statistisk sentralbyrå/Statistics Norway 2012).A shift to more favorable ecological conditions, combined with governance changes that open up more options for local actors despite substantial insecurity, does not automatically generate change at the local scale.The recovery of the fjord fisheries appears to be a result of the strategies of local actors who believe in the future of their communities and the prospects for a livelihood based on local fisheries traditions.However, the adaptive capacity of communities should be understood relative to the large-scale governance frameworks into which the communities are integrated; they are also dependent on larger society in a number of ways that circumscribe the options available to them for responding to ecological change.