The opportunities for social science research change with developments in policy and social science, conservation biology, and ecological theory; population dynamics, quantitative methods, laws and current management or governance practices; industry operating procedures, social values, institutional change, and funding. This paper identifies opportunities for future social science research, and economics in particular, due to developments in economic theory and the shifting concerns of society. The opportunities lie in addressing the growing societal concerns over the environment, biodiversity, and sustainable resource use and bioeconomic modeling that begins to match advancements in population dynamics and ecology. The opportunities address multiple species, bioeconomic modeling that accounts for space, the heterogeneity of fishing industries and the need to address distributional issues and trade-offs. Future social science research will relate to impacts with different policies, incentives, and property and use rights, uncertainty, international management of transboundary stocks of fish and biodiversity conservation (whales, sea turtles, sea birds, dolphins, etc.), marine reserves, technical change, the shift in orientation from management of fisheries as a commercial fishery and a simple optimal harvest strategy to ecosystem management. Important ideas for the future include actual fisheries management of Pareto-improvements from a second-best situation rather than normative concerns that dominate most theoretical fisheries economics research.