Understanding change, complexities, and governability challenges in small-scale fisheries: a case study of Limbe, Cameroon, Central Africa

被引:9
|
作者
Nyiawung, Richard A. [1 ]
Bennett, Nathan J. [2 ,3 ,4 ]
Loring, Philip A. [1 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Guelph, Dept Geog Environm & Geomat, Guelph, ON, Canada
[2] World Wildlife Fund Int, Gland, Switzerland
[3] Int Union Conservat Nat IUCN, Commiss Environm Econ & Social Policy, People & Ocean Specialist Grp, Gland, Switzerland
[4] Peopled Seas Initiat, N Vancouver, BC, Canada
[5] Univ Guelph, Arrell Food Inst, Guelph, ON, Canada
关键词
Small-scale fisheries; Coastal communities; Fish-as-food; Sustainability; Cameroon; Central Africa; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; FOOD SECURITY; FISH; INSIGHTS; ACCESS; COAST; SUSTAINABILITY; EXPLOITATION; MANAGEMENT; PACIFIC;
D O I
10.1007/s40152-023-00296-3
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Climate change, globalization, and increasing industrial and urban activities threaten the sustainability and viability of small-scale fisheries. How those affected can collectively mobilize their actions, share knowledge, and build their local adaptive capacity will shape how best they respond to these changes. This paper examines the changes experienced by small-scale fishing actors, social and governance complexities, and the sustainability challenges within the fisheries system in Limbe, Cameroon. Drawing on the fish-as-food framework, we discuss how ineffective fishery management in light of a confluence of global threats has resulted in changes to fish harvesters' activities, causing shortages in fish supply and disruptions in the fish value chain. The paper uses focus group discussions with fish harvesters and fishmongers to present three key findings. First, we show that changes in the fisheries from increased fishing activities and ineffective fishery management have disrupted fish harvesting and supply, impacting the social and economic well-being of small-scale fishing actors and their communities. Second, there are complexities in the fisheries value chain due to shortages in fish supply, creating conflicts between fisheries actors whose activities are not regulated by any specific set of rules or policies. Third, despite the importance of small-scale fisheries in Limbe, management has been abandoned by fishing actors who are not well-equipped with the appropriate capacity to design and enforce effective fishery management procedures and protections against illegal fishing activities. Empirical findings from this understudied fishery make scholarly contributions to the literature on the fish-as-food framework and demonstrate the need to support small-scale actors' fishing activities and the sustainability of the fisheries system in Limbe.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Management of small-scale fisheries and their issues: Case study in Sibolga, North Sumatera, Indonesia
    Firdaus, M.
    Huda, H. M.
    Mira
    Suryawati, S. H.
    Kurniawan, T.
    Sari, Y. D.
    3RD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON FISHERIES AND MARINE SCIENCES, 2021, 718
  • [22] Navigating change: Second-generation challenges of small-scale fisheries co-management in the Philippines and Vietnam
    Ratner, Blake D.
    Oh, Edmund J. V.
    Pomeroy, Robert S.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2012, 107 : 131 - 139
  • [23] Network approach for understanding small-scale fisheries governance: The case of the Chilean coastal co-management system
    Marin, Andres
    Berkes, Fikret
    MARINE POLICY, 2010, 34 (05) : 851 - 858
  • [24] Economics of small-scale aquaponics system in West Africa: A SANFU case study
    Benjamin, Emmanuel O.
    Buchenrieder, Gertrud R.
    Sauer, Johannes
    AQUACULTURE ECONOMICS & MANAGEMENT, 2021, 25 (01) : 53 - 69
  • [25] Small Scale Fisheries, Dolphins and Societal Challenges: A Case Study in the City of Volos, Greece
    Pardalis, Stergios V.
    Komnenou, Anastasia
    Exadactylos, Athanasios
    Gkafas, Georgios A.
    CONSERVATION, 2021, 1 (02): : 81 - 90
  • [26] Managing coastal pelagic fisheries: A case study of the small-scale purse seine fishery in Kenya
    Okemwa, Gladys M.
    Maina, George W.
    Munga, Cosmas N.
    Mueni, Elizabeth
    Barabara, Mwaka S.
    Ndegwa, Stephen
    Thoya, Pascal
    Ntheketha, Nicholas
    OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT, 2017, 144 : 31 - 39
  • [27] Identifying and classifying small-scale fisheries metiers in the Mediterranean: A case study in the Patraikos Gulf, Greece
    Tzanatos, Evangelos
    Somarakis, Stylianos
    Tserpes, George
    Koutsikopoulos, Constantin
    FISHERIES RESEARCH, 2006, 81 (2-3) : 158 - 168
  • [28] Food security versus environment conservation: A case study of Solomon Islands' small-scale fisheries
    Hardy, Pierre-Yves
    Belie, Christophe
    Doyen, Luc
    Schwarz, Anne-Maree
    ENVIRONMENTAL DEVELOPMENT, 2013, 8 : 38 - 56
  • [29] Assessing the performance of a participatory governance transformation in small-scale fisheries: A case study from Uruguay
    Bausero-Jorcin, Sofia
    Gelcich, Stefan
    Gianelli, Ignacio
    Jorge-Romero, Gabriela
    Lezama, Cecilia
    Defeo, Omar
    MARINE POLICY, 2024, 160
  • [30] The contributions of coastal small-scale fisheries toward the sustainable development goals: a Kenyan Case Study
    E. N. Fondo
    R. E. Bitoun
    E. N. Kimani
    C. N. Munga
    N. Wambiji
    N. Ishmael
    D. Mwandikwa
    B. Busolo
    M. Okeri
    S. Abas
    G. W. Maina
    R. Devillers
    npj Ocean Sustainability, 4 (1):