Abstract
While the organizational dynamics of collective management systems have received much attention, relatively little work has focused on how households adapt their economic strategies in response to collective management regulations that impose constraints on the range of options available to households. In this paper we investigate the evolving interaction between household management strategies and collective management regulations for one or both of two ecologically interdependent floodplain resources, lake fisheries and seasonally inundated grasslands. Smallholder management strategies involve varying combinations of three main activities each associated with one of three main floodplain habitats: annual cropping on river levees, cattle ranching on natural grasslands and fishing in lakes. These three activities play complementary roles in the household economy. Annual cropping is both subsistence and market oriented, with cash from crop sales often invested in purchase of cattle. Fishing, in addition to providing animal protein, generates income for household purchases while crops are growing. Cattle ranching is the main savings strategy for smalholders, providing funds for family emergencies and capital investments. Despite the fertility of soils and the higher productivity per hectare of fishing, cattle ranching has expanded steadily on the floodplain at the expense of farming and fishing. Over the last two decades, communities throughout the Amazon floodplain have developed and implemented collective agreements to regulate access to and use of local lake fisheries. Depending on the measures included, the impact of these agreements on household management strategies can range from negligible to highly significant, requiring major adjustments to compensate for reduced fishing income. Expansion of smallholder cattle ranching has taken advantage of unregulated access to community grasslands. Unregulated access to community grasslands has been a major factor in the growth of smallholder ranching, and many households have far more cattle than could be sustained on their own property. The result is a classic tragedy of the commons in which growing numbers of cattle are overgrazing grasslands and degrading the productive capacity of floodplain fisheries. Concerned with the impact of cattle on floodplain habitat and conflicts between cattle owners and farmers, many communities have developed collective agreements to regulate grazing on grasslands. As with fishing, the impact of these agreements on household economic strategies varies depending on the degree to which they limit the number of cattle families can graze on grasslands. In this paper, we investigate interactions between smallholders household economic strategies for two major common pool resources and their respective management regimes. The paper identifies conflict between collective and individual strategies for long-term security as the critical issue for floodplain resources and concludes proposing a more household-based approach to collective management.
Highlights
Common pool resource management agreements are designed to resolve problems caused by unrestricted access to local resources, such as resource depletion, excessive and/or unfair competition, and conflict
While the organizational dynamics of collective management systems have received much attention, relatively little work has focused on how households adapt their economic strategies in response to collective management regulations that impose constraints on the range of options available to households
In this paper we investigate the evolving interaction between household management strategies and collective management regulations for one, or both, of two ecologically interdependent resources: lake fisheries and seasonally inundated grasslands of the Lower Amazon floodplain in Brazil
Summary
Common pool resource management agreements are designed to resolve problems caused by unrestricted access to local resources, such as resource depletion, excessive and/or unfair competition, and conflict. The impact of management regimes on household economic strategies can be even more complicated when users have access to two distinct, but interrelated common pool resources (Futemma and Brondizio 2002). In addition to farming, smallholders exploit two overlapping resources: floodplain lake fisheries and grasslands for grazing cattle. In this paper we investigate the relationship between household economic strategies and management regimes for both lake fisheries and grazing of cattle on community grasslands. We discuss the implications of these preliminary investigations into the interaction between household economic strategies and local management institutions for a household-centered approach to the study of common pool resource management systems
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