Armed conflict and fisheries in the Lake Victoria basin

Civil conflict is the most prevalent form of armed conflict in the world today, but this significant driver of food and income security has been largely missing from studies of fisheries. Fisheries conflict is an example of complex dynamics operating in social-ecological systems. We theorize and doc...

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Main Authors: Sarah M. Glaser, Cullen S. Hendrix, Brittany Franck, Karin Wedig, Les Kaufman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2019-03-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol24/iss1/art25/
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spelling doaj-2703d0e1963349e185c0d63ea97ad3192020-11-25T01:29:03ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872019-03-012412510.5751/ES-10787-24012510787Armed conflict and fisheries in the Lake Victoria basinSarah M. Glaser0Cullen S. Hendrix1Brittany Franck2Karin Wedig3Les Kaufman4Secure Fisheries program, One Earth FutureKorbel School of International Studies, University of DenverDepartment of Anthropology, University of ArizonaAfrica Chief Economist, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (German Society for International Cooperation, GIZ)Department of Biology & Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future, Boston UniversityCivil conflict is the most prevalent form of armed conflict in the world today, but this significant driver of food and income security has been largely missing from studies of fisheries. Fisheries conflict is an example of complex dynamics operating in social-ecological systems. We theorize and document the existence of such a feedback loop between conflict in Uganda and fisheries in Lake Victoria. Civil war in northern Uganda resulted in mass human population displacement, which corresponded in time with increases in fishing effort in Lake Victoria. Subsequent changes in catch of Nile perch, the dominant commercial fishery, sparked armed conflict in the lake itself, at Migingo Island, between Uganda and Kenya. From this case study, we draw seven main conclusions. First, these correlation-based relationships are illustrative but not conclusive and we call for further empirical investigation. Second, the couplings between conflict and fishing subsystems are spatially asymmetric: conflict effects are diffuse in their links to broad changes in the fishery, whereas fishery effects may produce more localized conflict events. Third, and most relevant to conflict scholars, the drivers of fishing effort and catch may originate in different subsystems, but their changes and effects must be analyzed in concert. Fourth, the complex and path-dependent impacts of conflicts on natural resources in general, and fisheries in particular, highlights the urgent need for targeted surveys and more mechanistic understanding. Fifth, the open access nature of fisheries in Lake Victoria may exacerbate instabilities not present in other systems. Sixth, the diffuse and context-specific effects of conflicts on fisheries means models of fisheries management (e.g., stock assessment) should not incorporate conflict as a driver at this time. Finally, countries and their stakeholders should focus on diversification in employment for short term coping mechanisms during conflict as a means of short-circuiting the conflict-fisheries feedback loop.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol24/iss1/art25/fisheries conflictfood securityinternally displaced personslake victoriasocial-ecological systems
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah M. Glaser
Cullen S. Hendrix
Brittany Franck
Karin Wedig
Les Kaufman
spellingShingle Sarah M. Glaser
Cullen S. Hendrix
Brittany Franck
Karin Wedig
Les Kaufman
Armed conflict and fisheries in the Lake Victoria basin
Ecology and Society
fisheries conflict
food security
internally displaced persons
lake victoria
social-ecological systems
author_facet Sarah M. Glaser
Cullen S. Hendrix
Brittany Franck
Karin Wedig
Les Kaufman
author_sort Sarah M. Glaser
title Armed conflict and fisheries in the Lake Victoria basin
title_short Armed conflict and fisheries in the Lake Victoria basin
title_full Armed conflict and fisheries in the Lake Victoria basin
title_fullStr Armed conflict and fisheries in the Lake Victoria basin
title_full_unstemmed Armed conflict and fisheries in the Lake Victoria basin
title_sort armed conflict and fisheries in the lake victoria basin
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Civil conflict is the most prevalent form of armed conflict in the world today, but this significant driver of food and income security has been largely missing from studies of fisheries. Fisheries conflict is an example of complex dynamics operating in social-ecological systems. We theorize and document the existence of such a feedback loop between conflict in Uganda and fisheries in Lake Victoria. Civil war in northern Uganda resulted in mass human population displacement, which corresponded in time with increases in fishing effort in Lake Victoria. Subsequent changes in catch of Nile perch, the dominant commercial fishery, sparked armed conflict in the lake itself, at Migingo Island, between Uganda and Kenya. From this case study, we draw seven main conclusions. First, these correlation-based relationships are illustrative but not conclusive and we call for further empirical investigation. Second, the couplings between conflict and fishing subsystems are spatially asymmetric: conflict effects are diffuse in their links to broad changes in the fishery, whereas fishery effects may produce more localized conflict events. Third, and most relevant to conflict scholars, the drivers of fishing effort and catch may originate in different subsystems, but their changes and effects must be analyzed in concert. Fourth, the complex and path-dependent impacts of conflicts on natural resources in general, and fisheries in particular, highlights the urgent need for targeted surveys and more mechanistic understanding. Fifth, the open access nature of fisheries in Lake Victoria may exacerbate instabilities not present in other systems. Sixth, the diffuse and context-specific effects of conflicts on fisheries means models of fisheries management (e.g., stock assessment) should not incorporate conflict as a driver at this time. Finally, countries and their stakeholders should focus on diversification in employment for short term coping mechanisms during conflict as a means of short-circuiting the conflict-fisheries feedback loop.
topic fisheries conflict
food security
internally displaced persons
lake victoria
social-ecological systems
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol24/iss1/art25/
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