4.7 Article

Coastal transitions: Small-scale fisheries, livelihoods, and maritime zone developments in Southeast Asia

Journal

JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES
Volume 91, Issue -, Pages 184-194

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2022.02.006

Keywords

Small-scale fisheries; Coastal livelihoods; Southeast Asia; Agrarian change; Maritime

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP180100965]
  2. Ocean Nexus Center at the University of Washington EarthLab

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This study reviews literature from ten maritime states in Southeast Asia to assess the impact of maritime zone developments on small-scale fishing livelihoods. Despite declining opportunities, small-scale fishing remains an important coastal livelihood activity in the region. The study also analyses how newer maritime zone developments interact with fishing and reshape coastal livelihoods.
Across Southeast Asia, coastal livelihoods are becoming more diverse and more commodified, as maritime zone developments intensify. We review literature from the ten maritime states in Southeast Asia to assess how older and emerging forms of maritime zone developments influence the viability of small-scale fishing livelihoods. Applying a political economy lens to small-scale fisheries and maritime zone developments at regional scale, we show how small-scale fisheries persist as a significant coastal livelihood activity across the region, despite declining opportunities due to long-term intensification of fisheries exploitation. The paper further analyses the ways in which newer maritime zone developments, including aquaculture, land reclamation, special industrial zones, and tourism interact with fishing, and are reconfiguring coastal livelihoods in the region. Key trends that small-scale fishers and coastal communities must negotiate include deepening commodification, worsening environmental degradation, loss of access to fishing grounds, and an intensifying 'squeeze' on coastal space.

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