This page has only limited features, please log in for full access.
Dr. Pardalis has been a member of the Department of Sociology at DEREE-The American College of Greece since 2016. He has taught courses in the area of Socio-cultural Anthropology. His current teaching involves courses as Introduction to Anthropology, Cultural Anthropology, Ethnicity and Identity, Religion in the Mediterranean, Greek Folklore and Ethnography. His research interests include cross-cultural studies in the Mediterranean, European politics, identity building processes, religion, human rights, development, and sustainability. From 2018, he combines teaching at the University of Thessaly with anthropological research on biodiversity in the wider area of Volos and in cooperation with marine Biologists.
Existing literature on dolphin-fisheries interaction focused on Greece reveals both an undeveloped area for research, but also a lack of relevant data in this field. Although imperative, relevant research has been slow on innovation and cooperation among universities, official bureaus, and NGOs that are obliged to work together as European and national laws dictate. Most of the research in this new field focuses on the interaction between marine mammals and local fisheries, suggesting that this relationship may be problematic for both parties since the former are being treated (at least occasionally) with brutality, while the latter try to deal with economic loss. Dolphins and fishermen operate within the same ecological niches for their survival, the main area of conflict being nutritious fish. Anthropological research on ethnic identity has long dealt with antagonistic relationships over resources between adjacent groups of people. Marine biologists’ research in Greece focuses on the human factor, and some of its shortcomings may well be seen as the result of limited, or an absence of, training in social sciences. This article attempts to draw from anthropological theory to shed light on a particular symbiosis between humans and dolphins. Multidisciplinary approaches gain ground in a wide range of research interests and seem to be fruitful in terms of theoretical and practical results.
Stergios Pardalis; Anastasia Komnenou; Athanasios Exadactylos; Georgios Gkafas. Small Scale Fisheries, Dolphins and Societal Challenges: A Case Study in the City of Volos, Greece. Conservation 2021, 1, 81 -90.
AMA StyleStergios Pardalis, Anastasia Komnenou, Athanasios Exadactylos, Georgios Gkafas. Small Scale Fisheries, Dolphins and Societal Challenges: A Case Study in the City of Volos, Greece. Conservation. 2021; 1 (2):81-90.
Chicago/Turabian StyleStergios Pardalis; Anastasia Komnenou; Athanasios Exadactylos; Georgios Gkafas. 2021. "Small Scale Fisheries, Dolphins and Societal Challenges: A Case Study in the City of Volos, Greece." Conservation 1, no. 2: 81-90.