Fishing from the Shore: Exploring coastal transformations and changing life opportunities in an urban fishing community of India
Abstract
This thesis explores changing life opportunities in an urban fishing community in the Global South, based on a case study of a village situated on the periphery of Mangalore, a swiftly growing, middlesized city in Karnataka state, India. During eight months of ethnographic fieldwork, I observed varying interpretations and active contestation around emerging urbanization, shifting interactions between land and water, and changing livelihood activities.
Fishing from the Shore views urban fisheries as a component of socio-material entanglements on the coast. This perspective is based on the fact that urban fisheries depend not only on the possibility of accessing and controlling marine resources, but also on the ability to negotiate and mediate claims over (unstable) coastal land, and to adjust to wider political economic changes due to urbanisation. The thesis subsequently asks the research question ‘Which social and material processes co-constitute urban coastal transformations?’ to highlight the importance of both social and material processes in the ongoing coastal transformations. The thesis contributes to the field of small-scale fisheries research in the Global South by shifting the analytical focus from marine-based resources to coastal spaces, and from a merely human focus to the broader entanglement of humans and nature in coastal transformations. It does so, based on four
theoretical themes derived from Urban Political Ecology: socionature, power, contested urban landscapes, and situatedness. Applying the four theoretical themes, the thesis brings into light a city that becomes merged with the contested landscape. The thesis also brings into view urban fishers as active agents who can contest, negotiate, and respond to livelihood changes and urban land pressures in myriad ways. This approach defuses the view that inequality is an absolute term during coastal transformations. Rather, uneven outcomes during transformations depend on the ability of individuals and groups to access and control resources across various networks and scales.
Parts of work
I. Kadfak, A. (n.d.). More than just fishing: The formation of livelihood strategies in an urban fishing community in Mangaluru, India. (Submitted/under revision for Journal of Development Studies) II. Kadfak, A., & Knutsson, P. (2017). Investigating the Waterfront: The Entangled Sociomaterial Transformations of Coastal Space in Karnataka, India. Society & Natural Resources, 30(6): 707–
22. ::doi::10.1080/08941920.2016.1273418 III. Kadfak, A., & Oskarsson, P. (2017). The shifting sands of land governance in peri-urban Mangaluru,
India. Contemporary South Asia, 25(4): 399–414. ::doi::10.1080/09584935.2017.1387097 IV. Kadfak, A. (n.d.). Intermediary politics: the dynamics of formal and in formal institutions in peri-urban Mangaluru. (Submitted/under review for Forum of Development Studies)
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
School of Global Studies, Human Ecology Section ; Institutionen för globala studier, avdelningen för humanekologi
Disputation
Fredagen den 16 mars 2018, kl. 13.15, Sal 420, Annedalseminariet, Campus Linné, Seminariegatan 1A, Göteborg.
Date of defence
2018-03-16
alin.kadfak@gu.se
View/ Open
Date
2018-02-22Author
Kadfak, Alin
Keywords
coastal transformations
India
small-scale fisheries
urban political ecology
socionature
power
inequality
intermediary
unstable coastal land
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-629-0458-6
978-91-629-0459-3
Language
eng