Co-management Challenges In The Lake Victoria Fisheries : A Context Approach

This doctoral thesis examines the challenges to co-management in the Tanzania part of Lake Victoria. The study mainly addresses the Nile perch fishery and uses the fishing communities of Bukoba Rural district, Tanzania as a case study. Co-management in Lake Victoria is defined as the sharing of the...

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Main Author: Kateka, Adolphine G.
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Stockholms universitet, Kulturgeografiska institutionen 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-35174
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-86071-31-8
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-86069-14-8
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-su-351742015-06-17T04:50:40ZCo-management Challenges In The Lake Victoria Fisheries : A Context ApproachengKateka, Adolphine G.Stockholms universitet, Kulturgeografiska institutionenStockholm2010Lake Victoriaco-managementNile perch fisherypovertyillegal fishingmulti-lvel analysisneo-liberal policiesBukobaTanzaniaHuman geographyKulturgeografiThis doctoral thesis examines the challenges to co-management in the Tanzania part of Lake Victoria. The study mainly addresses the Nile perch fishery and uses the fishing communities of Bukoba Rural district, Tanzania as a case study. Co-management in Lake Victoria is defined as the sharing of the management responsibilities between the state and the fishing communities. Co-management was adopted in the Lake Victoria fisheries on the understanding that it has the capacity to provide space in which the poor resource users could be empowered to sustainably manage their resource base. The assumption was that the sharing of the management responsibilities between the state and the community of users would have led to equity in resource access, poverty reduction and resource sustainability. Thus, reducing the role of the state and enhancing that of the communities was seen as a solution to the problems of poverty and illegal fishing that are threatening the sustainability of the fishery and the fishers dependent on it. However, in spite of these proclaimed efforts, illegal fishing and poverty in Lake Victoria remain major threats to the long-term sustainability of the fishery, a fact that is raising questions on the efficacy of co-management in Lake Victoria. These questions have particularly focused on the co-management model and the neo-liberal ideals that underlie it, namely decentralization, participation and accountability. The central argument in this thesis, however, is that co-management performance in Lake Victoria is to a large extent shaped by the complex international, national, and local context in which it is implemented and which in turn shapes the problems of poverty and illegal fishing that co-management is supposed to address. The study concludes that the international and national politics behind the Nile perch fishery intersect with the cultural and social context in which the fishery is embedded to shape co-management performance at the local level. For analysis, the study applies a multi-level approach and draws insights from the common pool resources theory, the actor-oriented approach, the entitlement framework, and the theory of the state. Detailed interviews across scale, secondary data, policy documents, and laws, supported by quantitative data are the methods applied. Doctoral thesis, monographinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-35174urn:isbn:978-91-86071-31-8urn:isbn:978-91-86069-14-8Stockholm studies in human geography, 0349-7003 ; 19Södertörn doctoral dissertations, 1652-7399 ; 42application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Lake Victoria
co-management
Nile perch fishery
poverty
illegal fishing
multi-lvel analysis
neo-liberal policies
Bukoba
Tanzania
Human geography
Kulturgeografi
spellingShingle Lake Victoria
co-management
Nile perch fishery
poverty
illegal fishing
multi-lvel analysis
neo-liberal policies
Bukoba
Tanzania
Human geography
Kulturgeografi
Kateka, Adolphine G.
Co-management Challenges In The Lake Victoria Fisheries : A Context Approach
description This doctoral thesis examines the challenges to co-management in the Tanzania part of Lake Victoria. The study mainly addresses the Nile perch fishery and uses the fishing communities of Bukoba Rural district, Tanzania as a case study. Co-management in Lake Victoria is defined as the sharing of the management responsibilities between the state and the fishing communities. Co-management was adopted in the Lake Victoria fisheries on the understanding that it has the capacity to provide space in which the poor resource users could be empowered to sustainably manage their resource base. The assumption was that the sharing of the management responsibilities between the state and the community of users would have led to equity in resource access, poverty reduction and resource sustainability. Thus, reducing the role of the state and enhancing that of the communities was seen as a solution to the problems of poverty and illegal fishing that are threatening the sustainability of the fishery and the fishers dependent on it. However, in spite of these proclaimed efforts, illegal fishing and poverty in Lake Victoria remain major threats to the long-term sustainability of the fishery, a fact that is raising questions on the efficacy of co-management in Lake Victoria. These questions have particularly focused on the co-management model and the neo-liberal ideals that underlie it, namely decentralization, participation and accountability. The central argument in this thesis, however, is that co-management performance in Lake Victoria is to a large extent shaped by the complex international, national, and local context in which it is implemented and which in turn shapes the problems of poverty and illegal fishing that co-management is supposed to address. The study concludes that the international and national politics behind the Nile perch fishery intersect with the cultural and social context in which the fishery is embedded to shape co-management performance at the local level. For analysis, the study applies a multi-level approach and draws insights from the common pool resources theory, the actor-oriented approach, the entitlement framework, and the theory of the state. Detailed interviews across scale, secondary data, policy documents, and laws, supported by quantitative data are the methods applied.
author Kateka, Adolphine G.
author_facet Kateka, Adolphine G.
author_sort Kateka, Adolphine G.
title Co-management Challenges In The Lake Victoria Fisheries : A Context Approach
title_short Co-management Challenges In The Lake Victoria Fisheries : A Context Approach
title_full Co-management Challenges In The Lake Victoria Fisheries : A Context Approach
title_fullStr Co-management Challenges In The Lake Victoria Fisheries : A Context Approach
title_full_unstemmed Co-management Challenges In The Lake Victoria Fisheries : A Context Approach
title_sort co-management challenges in the lake victoria fisheries : a context approach
publisher Stockholms universitet, Kulturgeografiska institutionen
publishDate 2010
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-35174
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-86071-31-8
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-86069-14-8
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