A social-ecological trap perspective to explain the emergence and persistence of illegal fishing in small-scale fisheries

被引:24
|
作者
Nahuelhual, Laura [1 ,2 ]
Saavedra, Gonzalo [1 ,3 ]
Amalia Mellado, Maria [1 ]
Vergara Vergara, Ximena [1 ]
Vallejos, Tomas [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Austral Chile, Ctr Invest Dinam Ecosistemas Marinos Altas Latitu, Campus Isla Teja, Valdivia, Chile
[2] Univ Austral Chile, Fac Ciencias Econ & Adm, Inst Econ, Campus Isla Teja, Valdivia, Chile
[3] Univ Austral Chile, Inst Estudios Antropol, Campus Isla Teja, Valdivia, Chile
[4] Univ Austral Chile, Fac Ciencias Forestales & Recursos Nat, Ecosistemas Forestales & Recursos Nat, Campus Isla Teja, Valdivia, Chile
关键词
Resource management syndromes; Small-scale fisheries; Fisheries governance; Environmental crime; Social-ecological systems; DETERRENCE; CRIME; GOVERNANCE; PUNISHMENT; ECONOMICS; COASTAL; SYSTEM; AREAS;
D O I
10.1007/s40152-019-00154-1
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
We use the social-ecological trap (SET) concept and path-dependence analysis to explain the emergence and persistence of illegal fishing, taking the Chilean king crab fishery as a case study. The results suggest that the fishery is caught in a SET, which we label the "illegality trap", characterized by positive feedbacks between regulation astringency, illegal access, fishers' resistance, and fishing effort that keep the fishery in an undesirable state. As a process, illegal fishing arises as the denunciation of past poverty conditions and policies enacted to protect private rights to the sea, against traditional fishing logics. As a state of the system, illegal fishing is a relational phenomenon involving fishers, intermediaries, processors, and consumers. Over time, the different types of fishers emerge along well-structured international and local fish chains: the legal fisher, the cooperative fisher, the legal-illegal fisher, and the illegal fisher, encompassing a continuum from subsistence to competitive rationalities, which reflect adaptive strategies in the face of normative-legislative constrictions and market opportunities. Yet, the "legal" or the "illegal" is not a permanent condition, but it can be one and/or the other, depending on the circumstances. These results contend the reductionist view of the deterrence dogma which depicts illegal fishing as a matter of rational utility maximizers. On the contrary, the SET described here reflects the complexity of a problem with many edges, from legislation legitimacy to cultural responses across all the actors involved.
引用
收藏
页码:105 / 117
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Assessment of Ostrom's social-ecological system framework for the comanagement of small-scale marine fisheries in Colombia: from local fishers' perspectives
    Botto-Barrios, Darlin
    Saavedra-Diaz, Lina M.
    ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY, 2020, 25 (01):
  • [32] Fishing places, fishing people: Traditions and issues in Canadian small-scale fisheries.
    Johnson, RN
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC HISTORY, 1999, 59 (04): : 1116 - 1117
  • [33] The social ecological system framework as a knowledge classificatory system for benthic small-scale fisheries
    Basurto, Xavier
    Gelcich, Stefan
    Ostrom, Elinor
    GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 2013, 23 (06): : 1366 - 1380
  • [34] Triggers of fishing gear loss incidents in small-scale fisheries in Peru
    Guidino, Chiara
    Alfaro-Cordova, Eliana
    Custodio-Uribe, Adrian
    Segura-Cobena, Eduardo
    Alfaro-Shigueto, Joanna
    Mangel, Jeffrey C.
    MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2024, 209
  • [35] How do governments respond to the social-ecological traps in small-scale fisheries and aquaculture? A case study in the Tam Giang lagoon, Viet Nam
    Hanh, Tong Thi Hai
    ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2024, 74 (03) : 518 - 531
  • [36] Social-ecological networks and connectivity within and between two communities of small-scale fishers in Mexico
    Munguia-Vega, Adrian
    Zepeda-Dominguez, Jose Alberto
    Perez-Alarcon, Maria Fernanda
    Amador-Castro, Imelda G.
    Fulton, Stuart
    Walther, Mariana
    Rodriguez-Fuentes, Marian
    Fumero-Andreu, Claudia Maria
    Torre, Jorge
    ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY, 2022, 27 (01):
  • [37] Increasing social-ecological resilience within small-scale agriculture in conflict-affected Guatemala
    Hellin, Jon
    Ratner, Blake D.
    Meinzen-Dick, Ruth
    Lopez-Ridaura, Santiago
    ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY, 2018, 23 (03):
  • [38] Resilience and social thresholds in small-scale fishing communities
    J. L. Blythe
    Sustainability Science, 2015, 10 : 157 - 165
  • [39] Resilience and social thresholds in small-scale fishing communities
    Blythe, J. L.
    SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE, 2015, 10 (01) : 157 - 165
  • [40] 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