Record ID | marc_oapen/convert_oapen_20201117.mrc:11483562:2892 |
Source | marc_oapen |
Download Link | /show-records/marc_oapen/convert_oapen_20201117.mrc:11483562:2892?format=raw |
LEADER: 02892namaa2200421uu 450
001 http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/33749
005 20131109
020 $aOAPEN_459237
024 7 $a10.26530/OAPEN_459237$cdoi
041 0 $aEnglish
042 $adc
072 7 $aKNAF$2bicssc
100 1 $aFabinyi, Michael$4auth
245 10 $aFishing for Fairness : Poverty, Morality and Marine Resource Regulation in the Philippines
260 $aCanberra$bANU Press$c2012
300 $a1 electronic resource (227 p.)
506 0 $aOpen Access$2star$fUnrestricted online access
520 $aFishing for Fairness develops an explicitly cultural perspective on environmental politics in the Philippines by analysing the responses of fishers to marine resource regulations. In the resource frontier of the Calamianes Islands, fishing, conservation and tourism provide the context where competing visions of how to engage with marine resources are played out. The book draws on data from ethnographic fieldwork with fishers, government and NGO officials, fish traders and tourism operators to show how the strategic responses of fishers to management initiatives are couched within particular cultural idioms. Tapping into broader notions of morality in the Philippines, fishers express a discourse that emphasises their poverty and the obligations of the wealthy to treat them with fairness. By deploying this discourse, fishers are able to reframe what are—on the surface—questions of environmental management into issues about poverty within particular social relationships. By using a cultural political ecology framework to analyse fishers’ responses to regulation, the book emphasises the distinctive ways in which marginalised people in the Philippines resist and reframe resource management initiatives. Fishing for Fairness will appeal to both academics and policy makers interested in marine resource management, political ecology, anthropology and development studies particularly throughout the Asia-Pacific.
540 $aAll rights reserved$4http://oapen.org/content/about-rights
546 $aEnglish
650 7 $aFisheries & related industries$2bicssc
653 $aphilippines
653 $amarine resources
653 $aattitudes
653 $amanagement
653 $aworking poor
653 $afishing
653 $aCalamian Islands
653 $aEnvironmental degradation
653 $aFishery
653 $aGrouper
653 $aIllegal
653 $aunreported and unregulated fishing
653 $aLive fish trade
653 $aPalawan
653 $aTourism
856 40 $awww.oapen.org$uhttps://library.oapen.org/bitstream/id/fdf6db89-44a7-4ed3-8faa-a5fb953f2812/459237.pdf$70$zOAPEN Library: download the publication
856 40 $awww.oapen.org$uhttp://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/33749$70$zOAPEN Library: description of the publication