A group for anthropologists (and friends) working with fisheries issues and coastal communities.
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I just came to know about this group. It is fascinating! My first encounter with coastal fishing in rural Sri Lanka (Ceylon) was in early 1970s. After that I did not get much involved in rural coastal fining communities. I looked at the effects of mechanization and its impact on social formation in coastal villages in Sri Lanka. I am much interested in doing a full scale research and see what has happened after 40 years of my research in the village I did fieldwork.
If any conference coming up in this line of thinking, please inform me as well.
Hi everyone. Wished I could have been in Seattle this year; many good panels?
As some of you know, before moving to Europe and getting sucked into EU (and African and SE Asian) fisheries... I worked in Japan. Had only managed two short trips over the years, but had another trip planned for this autumn. Unfortunately, the coastal areas of "my" town were wiped out in the tsunami on the 11th March.
I don't yet have an idea of where to take future research now, after the initial "life has changed drastically" reports, but I am sure there will be some initial work on adapting to the disaster ... so if anyone is doing work on similar issues (e.g., Deepwater Horizon, Hurricane Katrina, Exxon Valdez, etc). please drop me a line. The recovery will take many years and already I know the face of the fishing in the community will be altered drastically.
Thanks, Alyne
PS the FCA member in the photo with me lost everything. In fact, every fisher/FCA member lost everything in the town. At the prefectural level, 100% of aquacuture and 96% of commercial fishing vessels were lost....
Call for Papers: Reconsidering the Coastal Community in the 21st Century
27th International Lowell Wakefield Fisheries Symposium, “Fishing Peoples of the North: Cultures, Economies, and Management Responding to Change”
Anchorage, Alaska; September 14-17, 2011 http://seagrant.uaf.edu/conferences/2011/wakefield-people/index.php
Due Date for Abstracts: April 4, 2011
Reconsidering the Coastal Community in the 21st Century
Co-Chairs: Marie Lowe, University of Alaska Anchorage and Kate Reedy-Maschner, Idaho State University
Increasing restricted access in fisheries, the rising cost of living in northern rural areas, and the single sector economies of many coastal communities have increased their vulnerability to short and long-term resource and market instabilities. Barriers to upward mobility in traditional occupational roles cause many communities to currently suffer effects of brain drain but they are also at once characterized by a strong sense of place shared among residents; a "social embeddedness" (McCay 2000) connected to home communities. This panel will explore the concept of “community” across the coastal North and how its residents adapt to socioeconomic and environmental change, sustain or reject coastal livelihoods, and the disparate methods employed in adjusting to new and changing political and economic realities. Fleets, processors, labor pools, and coastal communities themselves are increasingly divergent entities with distinct goals, constraints, access to resources, political power, economic opportunities and alternatives ranging from subsistence strategies to tourism to energy development. By exploring new approaches to diversification, cooperation, and mitigating conflict, these papers will address and expose how coastal communities might be innovating in ways that contribute to community viability.
We encourage abstract submissions from scholars working on coastal issues in northern areas or other regions with similar issues for cross-cultural discussion.
Queries and abstracts can be emailed to:
Marie Lowe marie.lowe@uaa.alaska.edu
Kate Reedy-Maschner reedkath@isu.eduFISHING PEOPLE OF THE NORTH: CULTURES, ECONOMIES, AND MANAGEMENT RESPONDING TO CHANGE
27th Lowell Wakefield International Fisheries Symposium Anchorage, Alaska, September 14-18, 2011
This international symposium will provide a forum for scholars, fishery managers, fishing families, and others to explore the human dimensions of fishery systems and growing need to include social science research in policy processes.
Theme areas:
Human/Environment Relationships
Fishing Communities in Transition
Indigenous and Rural Knowledge and Communities
Governance and Management Issues in the North
Celebrating the Life of Fishing Peoples
Please submit proposed panel title, abstract (250 words), and expected speakers by November 15, 2010, to Courtney Carothers clcarothers@alaska.edu We also welcome individual paper and poster abstracts. For more information on this symposium see http://seagrant.uaf.edu/conferences/2011/wakefield-people/index.php.
ALASKA SEA GRANT, UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA FAIRBANKS