Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I ADDING VALUE
- 1 The Blessing of the Commons: Small-Scale Fisheries, Community Property Rights, and Coastal Natural Assets
- 2 Natural Resource Management and Poverty Alleviation in Mountain Areas
- 3 Harvesting the Rain: Fighting Ecological Poverty through Participatory Democracy
- 4 Net Benefits: The Ecological Restoration of Inland Fisheries in Bangladesh
- Part II DEMOCRATIZING ACCESS
- Part III CAPTURING BENEFITS
- Part IV DEFENDING THE COMMONS
- About the Contributors
- Index
1 - The Blessing of the Commons: Small-Scale Fisheries, Community Property Rights, and Coastal Natural Assets
from Part I - ADDING VALUE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I ADDING VALUE
- 1 The Blessing of the Commons: Small-Scale Fisheries, Community Property Rights, and Coastal Natural Assets
- 2 Natural Resource Management and Poverty Alleviation in Mountain Areas
- 3 Harvesting the Rain: Fighting Ecological Poverty through Participatory Democracy
- 4 Net Benefits: The Ecological Restoration of Inland Fisheries in Bangladesh
- Part II DEMOCRATIZING ACCESS
- Part III CAPTURING BENEFITS
- Part IV DEFENDING THE COMMONS
- About the Contributors
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Following the influential article by Garrett Hardin titled ‘Tragedy of the commons’, it is part of both popular and scholarly belief that unless natural resources are strictly in the domain of private or state property, their fate is an inevitable ruin (Hardin 1968). Closer examination of the actions of lowincome communities who depend on natural resources for their daily livelihoods has recently brought to the fore a more positive view about human proclivity for caring and nurturing common resources found in nature.
A good example is found in the state of Kerala, in India, where small-scale, community-based fisherfolk initiated collective action to invest in rejuvenating the natural assets of the sea that had been destroyed by the incessant fishing operations of large-scale bottom trawlers in the region. They went about erecting artificial reefs at the sea bottom in coastal waters to create anthropogenic marine environments. Reefs act as fish refugia and become sources of food for them as the structures are soon covered with bottom-dwelling biomass. Artificial reefs placed in strategic positions in the coastal waters can in time increase the overall biomass and the fish stock in the local ecosystem. An unintended side-effect of sufficiently large artificial reefs is that they act as barriers to the operation of bottom trawl nets, effectively performing the role of a sea-bottom fence against incursions of trawlers into coastal waters. Such reefs have not yet healed the wounds inflicted on the coastal ecosystem of the area, nor can the fishing communities depend exclusively on them as a major source of livelihood.
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- Information
- Reclaiming NatureEnvironmental Justice and Ecological Restoration, pp. 23 - 54Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2007
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