Resource degradation, marginalization, and poverty in small-scale fisheries: threats to social- ecological resilience in India and Brazil

被引:87
|
作者
Nayak, Prateep K. [1 ]
Oliveira, Luiz E. [2 ]
Berkes, Fikret [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Waterloo, Fac Environm, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada
[2] Univ Manitoba, Nat Resources Inst, Winnipeg, MB R3T 2N2, Canada
来源
ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY | 2014年 / 19卷 / 02期
关键词
Brazil; degradation; disempowerment; exclusion; exploitation; fisheries; human-environment disconnect; identity; impoverishment; India; marginalization; poverty; resilience; small-scale fishery; social-ecological system; COASTAL; CONSERVATION; GOVERNANCE; SUSTAINABILITY; COMMUNITIES;
D O I
10.5751/ES-06656-190273
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
In this study we examine poverty in local fisheries using a social-ecological resilience lens. In assessing why " fishery may rhyme with poverty", Christophe B n suggests a typology of impoverishment processes, which includes economic exclusion, social marginalization, class exploitation, and political disempowerment as key mechanisms that accelerate poverty. We extend his analysis by exploring these four mechanisms further and by intertwining them with processes of environmental change and degradation. Our goal is to understand poverty in local fisheries as a process rooted in social and institutional factors as influenced by ecological dynamics. We argue that understanding poverty will require a focus on the social-ecological system (SES) as a whole, and addressing poverty will mean rebuilding not only collapsed stocks but the entire social-ecological system, including restoring relationships between resources and people. Information from two cases, the Chilika Lagoon on the Bay of Bengal in India, and the Paraty region on the southeastern coast of Brazil, is used to understand how fishery social-ecological systems come under pressure from drivers at multiple levels, resulting in a range of impacts and pushing the system to a breaking point or collapse. We analyze elements of what it takes for the whole system to break down or collapse and push fishers into poverty and marginalization. The Chilika SES has already broken down, and the Paraty SES is under pressure from multiple drivers of change. The two cases help contrast key dynamics in the social, cultural, economic, political, and environmental spheres, for lessons on system collapse and recovery. Rebuilding fisheries may be examined as a process of building and strengthening resilience. The challenge is to make the fishery social-ecological system more resilient, with more flexibility and options, not only within fishing activities but also within a range of other sectors.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 24 条
  • [1] Resilience and Social Adaptation to Climate Change Impacts in Small-Scale Fisheries
    Villasante, Sebastian
    Macho, Gonzalo
    Silva, Monalisa R. O.
    Lopes, Priscila F. M.
    Pita, Pablo
    Simon, Andres
    Balsa, Jose Carlos Marino
    Olabarria, Celia
    Vazquez, Elsa
    Calvo, Nuria
    FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE, 2022, 9
  • [2] The economic displacement of thousands of fishers in the Pantanal, Brazil: A telling story of small-scale fisheries marginalization worldwide.
    Fernando, Adriana Maria Espinoza
    Lopes, Douglas Alves
    Mateus, Lucia
    Penha, Jerry
    Suarez, Yzel Rondon
    Catella, Agostinho Carlos
    Nunes, Andre Valle
    Arenhart, Neusa
    Chiaravalloti, Rafael Morais
    FISH AND FISHERIES, 2024, 25 (06) : 951 - 958
  • [3] Social-ecological vulnerability to climate change in small-scale fisheries managed under spatial property rights systems
    Ruiz-Diaz, Raquel
    Liu, Xiaozi
    Aguion, Alba
    Macho, Gonzalo
    deCastro, Maite
    Gomez-Gesteira, Moncho
    Ojea, Elena
    MARINE POLICY, 2020, 121
  • [4] Social-ecological models with social hierarchy and spatial structure applied to small-scale fisheries
    Wulfing, Sophie
    White, Easton R.
    THEORETICAL ECOLOGY, 2024, 17 (04) : 325 - 336
  • [5] Resilience patterns in the analysis of social-ecological networks of small-scale fishing in a subtropical estuarine system
    Nether, Michele Cristina
    Andriguetto-Filho, Jose Milton
    Noernberg, Mauricio Almeida
    Cattani, Andre Pereira
    Mesquista, Isabeli Cristina Gomes
    Medeiros, Rodrigo Perereira
    Batista, Carlos Schneider
    Guanais, Jose Hugo Dias Godim
    Lana, Paulo da Cunha
    Di Domenico, Maikon
    OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT, 2024, 259
  • [6] Social-Ecological Dynamics of Sustainable Small-Scale Fisheries Management in the Sundarbans Mangrove Forest Region, Bangladesh
    Karim, Md Rezaul
    Ahasan, S. M. Nayem
    Rahman, Md Ashik Ur
    FISHERIES MANAGEMENT AND ECOLOGY, 2025,
  • [7] A social-ecological trap perspective to explain the emergence and persistence of illegal fishing in small-scale fisheries
    Nahuelhual, Laura
    Saavedra, Gonzalo
    Amalia Mellado, Maria
    Vergara Vergara, Ximena
    Vallejos, Tomas
    MARITIME STUDIES, 2020, 19 (01) : 105 - 117
  • [8] Emerging frontiers in social-ecological systems research for sustainability of small-scale fisheries
    Kittinger, John N.
    Finkbeiner, Elena M.
    Ban, Natalie C.
    Broad, Kenneth
    Carr, Mark H.
    Cinner, Joshua E.
    Gelcich, Stefan
    Cornwell, Mynah L.
    Koehn, J. Zachary
    Basurto, Xavier
    Fujita, Rod
    Caldwell, Margaret R.
    Cowder, Larry B.
    CURRENT OPINION IN ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY, 2013, 5 (3-4) : 352 - 357
  • [9] Social-ecological shifts, traps and collapses in small-scale fisheries: Envisioning a way forward to transformative changes
    Villasante, Sebastian
    Gianelli, Ignacio
    Castrejon, Mauricio
    Nahuelhual, Laura
    Ortega, Leonardo
    Sumaila, U. Rashid
    Defeo, Omar
    MARINE POLICY, 2022, 136
  • [10] Small-scale coastal fisheries in European Seas are not what they were: Ecological, social and economic changes
    Lloret, Josep
    Cowx, Ian G.
    Cabral, Henrique
    Castro, Margarida
    Font, Toni
    Goncalves, Jorge M. S.
    Gordoa, Ana
    Hoefnagel, Ellen
    Matic-Skoko, Sanja
    Mikkelsen, Eirik
    Morales-Nin, Beatriz
    Moutopoulos, Dimitrios K.
    Munoz, Marta
    dos Santos, Miguel Neves
    Pintassilgo, Pedro
    Pita, Cristina
    Stergiou, Konstantinos I.
    Unal, Vandet
    Veiga, Pedro
    Erzini, Karim
    MARINE POLICY, 2018, 98 : 176 - 186