The paradox of sustainable tuna fisheries in the Western Indian Ocean: between visions of blue economy and realities of accumulation

被引:0
|
作者
Mialy Andriamahefazafy
Megan Bailey
Hussain Sinan
Christian A. Kull
机构
[1] University of Lausanne,Institute of Geography and Sustainability
[2] Dalhousie University,Marine Affairs Program
来源
Sustainability Science | 2020年 / 15卷
关键词
Tuna; Sustainability; Political ecology; Access; Overfishing;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
For many coastal nations in the Western Indian Ocean, and notably the islands of Madagascar, Mauritius, and Seychelles, the tuna fishery is considered one of the main pillars of economic development, providing jobs and substantial revenues while ensuring food security. However, the fishery is also an illustration of the paradox behind the idea of the blue economy, where economic growth and sustainable use of resources are promoted as jointly achievable. We show that a sustainability narrative, in which the idea of fishing within ecological limits is present within government policy, public discourse, and practices, is, however, in contradiction with the realities of accumulation and growth that prevail in the fishery. When measures towards ecological preservation are to be taken, geopolitics of access to the sea and tuna enter the stage and change the position and narrative of the same actors, governments, and industrial actors that promote sustainability. We emphasize the difficult and nearly impossible path of practicing sustainability in the current model of growth-driven tuna fisheries. We argue for the need to repoliticize the practice of sustainability through the questioning of what we see in tuna fisheries: a hegemonic narrative of sustainability and implicit growth, without positive socio-ecological transformations.
引用
收藏
页码:75 / 89
页数:14
相关论文
共 20 条
  • [1] The paradox of sustainable tuna fisheries in the Western Indian Ocean: between visions of blue economy and realities of accumulation
    Andriamahefazafy, Mialy
    Bailey, Megan
    Sinan, Hussain
    Kull, Christian A.
    SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE, 2020, 15 (01) : 75 - 89
  • [2] Materializing the blue economy: tuna fisheries and the theory of access in the Western Indian Ocean
    Andriamahefazafy, Mialy
    Kull, Christian A.
    JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECOLOGY, 2019, 26 : 403 - 424
  • [3] Equitable pathways for sustainable tuna fisheries management in the Indian Ocean
    Tidd, Alex
    Guillotreau, Patrice
    Fu, Dan
    Mosqueira, Iago
    Dagorn, Laurent
    Capello, Manuela
    MARINE POLICY, 2025, 173
  • [4] Bycatch in the tuna purse-seine fisheries of the western Indian Ocean
    Romanov, EV
    FISHERY BULLETIN, 2002, 100 (01): : 90 - 105
  • [5] The Tuna 'Commodity Frontier': Business Strategies and Environment in the Industrial Tuna Fisheries of the Western Indian Ocean
    Campling, Liam
    JOURNAL OF AGRARIAN CHANGE, 2012, 12 (2-3) : 252 - 278
  • [7] Status and challenges for sustainable billfish fisheries in the Western Indian Ocean
    Kadagi, N., I
    Wambiji, N.
    Mann, B.
    Parker, D.
    Daly, R.
    Thoya, P.
    Rato, D. A. M.
    Halafo, J.
    Gaspare, L.
    Sweke, E. A.
    Ahmed, S.
    Raseta, S. B.
    Osore, M.
    Maina, J.
    Glaser, S.
    Ahrens, R.
    Sumaila, U. R.
    REVIEWS IN FISH BIOLOGY AND FISHERIES, 2022, 32 (04) : 1035 - 1061
  • [8] Status and challenges for sustainable billfish fisheries in the Western Indian Ocean
    N. I. Kadagi
    N. Wambiji
    B. Mann
    D. Parker
    R. Daly
    P. Thoya
    D. A. M. Rato
    J. Halafo
    L. Gaspare
    E. A. Sweke
    S. Ahmed
    S. B. Raseta
    M. Osore
    J. Maina
    S. Glaser
    R. Ahrens
    U. R. Sumaila
    Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries, 2022, 32 : 1035 - 1061
  • [9] Supporting blue economy agenda: fisheries, food security and climate change in the Indian Ocean
    Techera, Erika J.
    JOURNAL OF THE INDIAN OCEAN REGION, 2018, 14 (01) : 7 - 27
  • [10] Teleconnection Impacts of Climatic Variability on Tuna and Billfish Fisheries of the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean: A Study Towards Sustainable Fisheries Management
    Mondal, Sandipan
    Punt, Andre E.
    Mendes, David
    Osuka, Kennedy Edeye
    Lee, Ming-An
    FISH AND FISHERIES, 2025, 26 (02) : 240 - 256