Quota Policy and Local Fishing: Gendered Practices and Perplexities
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/6664Dato
2008Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Gerrard, SiriSammendrag
In April 1989, the Norwegian fisheries authorities declared a moratorium
on fishing by the Norwegian fleet for Barents Sea Cod (Gadus morhua). It subsequently
introduced a multi-level boat quota system within the coastal cod fishery
north of the sixty-second latitude in 1990. This paper treats the quota regime as a
national manifestation of neo-liberal globalising processes. It provides a macrolevel,
gendered analysis of trends in fishing registrants since the regime was introduced.
At the micro-level it explores examples of gendered responses to the
regime including the ways some women and men re-arranged their lives. The
micro-level discussion draws on findings from gender-informed ethnographic
research in Northern Norway’s fishery communities carried out since the beginning
of the 1970s including, in particular, fieldwork undertaken in 2003 and 2004
in Skarsvåg, a fishing village in the municipality of Nordkapp in the county of
Finnmark. Following Ramamurthy, it focuses on some of the gendered perplexities,
or joys and aches of globalised life that followed the introduction of the quota
regime. The analysis shows that, for fisheries, as in other industrial sectors, the
notion of perplexity can help us understand the uneven and conflicting consequences
of globalisation for women and men.
Forlag
SISWO (The Netherlands Universities' Social Research Centre)Sitering
Maritime Studies 6(2008) nr. 2 s. 53-75Metadata
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