Abstract

Caught between the sea and one of the world’s driest deserts, Pisagua’s coastal desert landscape is being transformed by the ways people utilize its natural isolation and rich protected waters. Periodically, these waters are altered by El Niño events. As distinct stakeholders -- fishermen, political activists, government planners, tourists and developers -- appropriate the site, their competing voices and identities alter the patterns of resource use. The most consistent resident group is a small number of fishermen, who have been willing to forego modern infrastructure to live in Pisagua’s harsh natural, political, and economic isolation. Because of this isolation, three separate national administrations have utilized the town as a political prison. The fishermen visualize political ghosts roaming the wooden ruins of this once thriving nitrate port. Developers today, however, aim to sanitize local political history in order to create a tourist “paradise”, and are being aided by a government plan to incorporate Pisagua into the core Chilean economy. Political activists, who use Pisagua as a pilgrimage site to indemnify the horrors of the past, protest this planas one of political sacrilege. The plan also has concrete ramifications for the fishing families of Pisagua, who not only struggle with scarcity during major El Niño events, but now face encroaching tourism as globalization encompasses their space. The resident grassroots community leader has proffered additions to the plan that directly benefit the community. He is a former political activist with visions of a community-based “paradise” that would incorporate the marginal voices of the fishermen. We discuss his role as part of an approach which views identity and livelihood as practical and essential elements of any economically viable management plan. We examine shifting identity roles in light of the Pisagua plans, and frame our discussion within the context of three overlapping climate changes: economic, political, and environmental. This lays the foundation for a suggested adaptive management strategy that serves the economic needs of Pisagua through a recognition of the importance of stakeholder identity and livelihood.Key words: Pisagua, Chile, political ecology, ethnography, space and place, identity,livelihood, environment, El Niño, climate change, political activism, pilgrim,globalization, fisheries, migration, tourism, MPA, co-management.

Highlights

  • Caught between the sea and one of the world’s driest deserts, Pisagua’s coastal desert landscape is being transformed by the ways people utilize its natural isolation and rich protected waters

  • The overall government development plan to incorporate Pisagua into the core Chilean economy through tourism is beginning to reverberate within the community, and the fishermen’s livelihood and sense of identity is subject to change

  • We hope to answer some specific questions concerning each of Pisagua’s stakeholders: What different visions of “paradise” are held by each group of stakeholders? What are the fishermen’s and political activists’ rights and access to resources and space as defined by government fisheries management and government tourism plans? To what extent do the fishermen and political activists have a voice in these plans? What active roles can the fishermen and activists play in maintaining their identity needs in the face of core development, and how will each of these roles interact with the needs of the other stakeholders?. From these questions we move to more solution-oriented inquiries: What are the advantages/disadvantages of a grassroots approach to the development of Pisagua? How can we transform the grassroots role from that of mediator between competing core/ periphery interests to that of mutually beneficial fuser of previously competing core/ periphery interests? Through these inquiries, we propose that considerations of local space and identity are necessary for globalization to function; i.e., the marginalization of local identities and livelihoods does not undermine local interests - it may undermine long-term global economic interests

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Summary

Introduction

Caught between the sea and one of the world’s driest deserts, Pisagua’s coastal desert landscape is being transformed by the ways people utilize its natural isolation and rich protected waters. The overall government development plan to incorporate Pisagua into the core Chilean economy through tourism is beginning to reverberate within the community, and the fishermen’s livelihood and sense of identity is subject to change.

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