
Karahan-Dursun et al.: the role of schooling in shaping the fishing footprint in greece 13
lation (Khan 2020; Chen et al. 2021; Çakar et al.
2021; Yıldırım et al. 2022; Ayad 2023; Akadiri et
al. 2025). Within this context, the present study
contributes to the growing empirical literature
by examining both linear and nonlinear effects of
schooling as an indicator of human capital on the
shing footprint (FF) in Greece over 1990-2022
through the AARDL approach, thereby offering
the rst empirical assessment of the exponential
effects of human capital on marine environmental
degradation for Greece under the EKC and EPC
frameworks.
The long run AARDL results show that higher
levels of schooling reduce the shing footprint in
Eq. (1), conrming that education contributes to
better marine environmental outcomes. This nd-
ing aligns with the broader evidence indicating that
accumulated knowledge and skills promote envi-
ronmental awareness, facilitate compliance with
regulations, support sustainable resource use, and
enhance the adoption of cleaner technologies (Yao
et al. 2020; Hondroyiannis et al. 2022; Çağlar et
al. 2024; Çamkaya and Karaaslan 2024; Dai et al.
2024; Teng et al. 2024). Importantly, the nonlinear
estimates in Eqs. (3) to (6) reveal that human capi-
tal exerts different effects across levels of accumu-
lation: at relatively low levels, increases in school-
ing coincide with higher environmental pressure,
whereas once human capital surpasses a threshold,
it contributes to environmental improvement by
easing the burden on shing grounds. This pattern
is consistent with ndings from Khan (2020), Chen
et al. (2021), and Yıldırım et al. (2022), and reects
a well-known transition mechanism in which early
phases of human capital expansion are associated
with intensied economic activity and resource
extraction, while higher human capital levels
strengthen environmental governance, promote
behavioral change, and facilitate the diffusion of
sustainable practices.
Results also validate the EKC hypothesis for
Greece, indicating that economic growth deterio-
rates environmental quality at earlier stages but im-
proves it once income exceeds a certain threshold.
This is in line with evidence from Pata et al. (2023),
Yılancı et al. (2023), and Ayad et al. (2024), who
similarly conrm the EKC hypothesis in shing
ground contexts. However, for Eqs. (3) and (4),
economic growth has a positive long-run effect
on the shing footprint, supporting the argument
that higher economic activity can intensify pressure
on marine ecosystems, consistent with ndings of
Ganda (2022), Çamkaya and Karaaslan (2024),
and Uzar and Eyüboğlu (2025). Taken together,
these results suggest that the interaction between
economic development and marine environmental
quality is dynamic and context-specic, reinforcing
the need to align economic expansion with sustain-
ability-oriented regulatory frameworks.
Control variables offer additional insights into
marine environmental dynamics. The negative
association between unemployment and environ-
mental degradation conrms the EPC hypothesis
in shing grounds, consistent with the ndings of
Kashem and Rahman (2020), Tariq et al. (2022),
and Şahin et al. (2025). This relationship can be
explained through a labor-resource substitution
mechanism. Periods of rising unemployment are
typically accompanied by contractions in aggregate
economic activity, including reduced market-ori-
ented shing operations, lower industrial-scale
harvesting intensity, and declining seafood pro-
cessing and export demand. In the Greek context,
where commercial shing is highly integrated into
formal markets and regulated value chains, labor
market downturns tend to reduce capital-intensive
shing effort rather than expand subsistence-based
extraction. Consequently, higher unemployment
temporarily alleviates pressure on marine resources,
leading to a measurable reduction in the shing
footprint.
Urban population displays a dual nature: short-
run estimates indicate that rapid urban growth
increases the shing footprint due to immediate
resource demands and waste generation, whereas
long-run estimates show a negative effect, suggest-
ing that improved urban infrastructure, regulatory
enforcement, and greater public awareness even-