Abstract

Social scientists have long recognized that fishing is perceived by many coastal communities as a way of life that does much more than just provide material benefits. A corollary to this is that fishers are often reluctant to quit fishing. Marine fisheries are complex and dynamic, and are often subject to classic commons dilemmas. These dilemmas have become much more acute in recent decades as pressures on the world’s small-scale fisheries have mounted. We argue that a holistic social wellbeing approach provides a valuable perspective from which to view changing fisher perceptions of bag net fishing in the face of commons management failure in Gir Somnath District in Gujarat State, India. Fishers’ perceptions of fishing as a desirable occupation are not shaped by only their job satisfaction. Ineffective governance and largely failed institutions are the factors that fishers blame for the recent crisis in their fishery. Many fishers are pessimistic about the future of fishing and do not want their children to be a part of this occupation that was vibrant until recently.

Highlights

  • Many coastal communities have a strong fishing heritage, which passes from generation to generation

  • We argue that a social wellbeing approach provides a valuable perspective from which to view changing fisher perceptions of bag net fishing in the face of commons management failure in Gir Somnath District in Gujarat State, India

  • The social wellbeing approach provides a multidimensional analytical lens that helps in understanding the complexity of the bag net fishery, including objective and subjective dimensions and how they are shaped by material and relational factors

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Summary

Introduction

Many coastal communities have a strong fishing heritage, which passes from generation to generation. As Pollnac and Poggie note (2006), central to the job satisfaction of fishers and their adherence to the occupation is self-actualisation, which includes the sense of adventure, freedom, and challenge that fishing brings: It is this role of the professional hunter – and its excitement, suspense, and freedom of activity, and its dangers, insecurities, and frustrations – that changes with the changing occupational requirements of life in the modern world. This paper seeks to identify the factors which influence fishers’ perceptions of fishing in Gir Somnath District in Gujarat State, India. That analysis is coupled with a social wellbeing approach to understanding fishers’ perceptions of fishing as a desirable occupation, the future prospects of the occupation, and the various factors that shape fishers’ views. The social wellbeing approach provides a multidimensional analytical lens that helps in understanding the complexity of the bag net fishery, including objective and subjective dimensions and how they are shaped by material and relational factors. The analysis provides the basis for understanding the increasingly ambivalent ways in which fishers view their profession and heightens appreciation of the serious governance challenges the fishery faces

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