“Before we asked for permission, now we only give notice”: Women’s entrance into artisanal fisheries in Chile

Author:

Gallardo-Fernández Gloria L.ORCID,Saunders Fred

Abstract

Abstract Small-scale fisheries (SSF) in the Global South are increasingly subjected to the internationalisation of food systems. Guided by a feminist political ecology approach, we examine how gender relations and power structures within SSF are changing through policy interventions and market linkages. Chilean women working in SSF have traditionally been unregistered direct producers. Since the early 2000s, however, women have formally entered as fishers within this hitherto male-dominated space. Today, women constitute almost a quarter of artisanal fishers in Chile. While women have become more visible, among others, in their engagement in territorial use rights in fisheries (TURFs), little research attention has been paid to women’s roles within SSF. We redress this shortfall by examining the struggle to obtain TURFs by an all-women seaweed gatherers union in Coliumo (Bio-Bio Region, Chile). Using participatory research tools, we describe key gendered interactions and events over a local struggle for resources. Our findings show how closely related episodes of cooperation and conflict were involved in realising TURFs, which included differently-gendered relationships. While the women implicated in formalising fishing entitlements accrued individual benefit and enhanced their collective standing, the conflict left a deep scar among women in the community.

Funder

International Social Science Council (ISCC)-Transformations to Sustainability

Swedish Research Council/SRL

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Water Science and Technology,Development,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference57 articles.

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2. Álvarez, M.C., G. Stuardo Ruiz, D. Collao Navia, and C. Gajardo Cortes. 2017. La visualización femenina en la pesca artesanal: transformaciones culturales en el sur de Chile. Polis. Revista Latinoamericana 16 (46): 175–191.

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