Pêcheurs artisanaux en AMP : gardiens de la biodiversité ou des frontières maritimes ? (San Andrés, Colombie)

From a maritime anthropology perspective, this article analyzes how artisanal fishermen of the San Andrés Archipelago are propelled to the forefront of conflicts between commoning and sea grabbing. In doing so, it questions how this contributes to document the process of the maritimization of societ...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Justine Berthod
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Éditions en environnement VertigO 2021-05-01
Series:VertigO
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/30463
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spelling doaj-8cad173cde604c35b95d4ad9f34a8cfd2021-09-02T17:54:23ZfraÉditions en environnement VertigOVertigO1492-84422021-05-0121110.4000/vertigo.30463Pêcheurs artisanaux en AMP : gardiens de la biodiversité ou des frontières maritimes ? (San Andrés, Colombie)Justine BerthodFrom a maritime anthropology perspective, this article analyzes how artisanal fishermen of the San Andrés Archipelago are propelled to the forefront of conflicts between commoning and sea grabbing. In doing so, it questions how this contributes to document the process of the maritimization of societies. Built on six months of ethnographic work in fishing cooperatives, the article questions the positioning of artisanal fishermen as new guardians of the sea, by crossing several scales of analysis. The article first considers the recent upgrading of the social status of fishermen and then the place of their “good practices” as symbolic forms of localized appropriation of fishing territory. It then points out the contradictory dimension of the fishermen’s role of guardians of the sea at regional and sub-regional scales. In a context of regional border conflict and competitive access to oil exploration, the role assigned to fishermen by national institutions is one of heritage before being one of environmental citizens. The Biosphere Reserve fulfills above all a geopolitical function, making fishermen guardians of national frontiers rather than guardians of the biodiversity.http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/30463maritime anthropologyartisanal fishingocean grabbinglarge-scale marine protected areasoil explorationborder conflicts
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Justine Berthod
spellingShingle Justine Berthod
Pêcheurs artisanaux en AMP : gardiens de la biodiversité ou des frontières maritimes ? (San Andrés, Colombie)
VertigO
maritime anthropology
artisanal fishing
ocean grabbing
large-scale marine protected areas
oil exploration
border conflicts
author_facet Justine Berthod
author_sort Justine Berthod
title Pêcheurs artisanaux en AMP : gardiens de la biodiversité ou des frontières maritimes ? (San Andrés, Colombie)
title_short Pêcheurs artisanaux en AMP : gardiens de la biodiversité ou des frontières maritimes ? (San Andrés, Colombie)
title_full Pêcheurs artisanaux en AMP : gardiens de la biodiversité ou des frontières maritimes ? (San Andrés, Colombie)
title_fullStr Pêcheurs artisanaux en AMP : gardiens de la biodiversité ou des frontières maritimes ? (San Andrés, Colombie)
title_full_unstemmed Pêcheurs artisanaux en AMP : gardiens de la biodiversité ou des frontières maritimes ? (San Andrés, Colombie)
title_sort pêcheurs artisanaux en amp : gardiens de la biodiversité ou des frontières maritimes ? (san andrés, colombie)
publisher Éditions en environnement VertigO
series VertigO
issn 1492-8442
publishDate 2021-05-01
description From a maritime anthropology perspective, this article analyzes how artisanal fishermen of the San Andrés Archipelago are propelled to the forefront of conflicts between commoning and sea grabbing. In doing so, it questions how this contributes to document the process of the maritimization of societies. Built on six months of ethnographic work in fishing cooperatives, the article questions the positioning of artisanal fishermen as new guardians of the sea, by crossing several scales of analysis. The article first considers the recent upgrading of the social status of fishermen and then the place of their “good practices” as symbolic forms of localized appropriation of fishing territory. It then points out the contradictory dimension of the fishermen’s role of guardians of the sea at regional and sub-regional scales. In a context of regional border conflict and competitive access to oil exploration, the role assigned to fishermen by national institutions is one of heritage before being one of environmental citizens. The Biosphere Reserve fulfills above all a geopolitical function, making fishermen guardians of national frontiers rather than guardians of the biodiversity.
topic maritime anthropology
artisanal fishing
ocean grabbing
large-scale marine protected areas
oil exploration
border conflicts
url http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/30463
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