A digitised version of ICSF library, with more than 2000 original documents and 12,000+ curated links, collected over the last 33 years The International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF) is an international non-governmental organization that works towards the establishment of equitable, gender-just,self-reliant and sustainable fisheries, particularly in the small-scale, artisanal sector.
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Politics of vulnerability: Impacts of covid-19 and cyclone harold on Indo-Fijians engaged in small-scale fisheries

Mangubhai, Sangeeta and Nand, Yashika and Reddy, Chinnamma and Jagadish, Arundhati (2021) Politics of vulnerability: Impacts of covid-19 and cyclone harold on Indo-Fijians engaged in small-scale fisheries. Environmental Science and Policy, 120. pp. 195-203. ISSN 1462-9011

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Abstract

The global COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the shortcomings of our health, social, and economic systems. While responding to the health crisis, governments are scrambling to understand and address the knock-on economic effects from market disruptions, and respond to other major disturbances (e.g. natural disasters). We conducted 61 key informant interviews with Indo-Fijian small-scale fisheries (SSF) actors (i.e. fishers, boat owners (that may or may not fish), crew members, and traders) in May 2020, two months after Fiji got its first case of COVID-19 and a month after Cyclone Harold hit the country. We examined how these SSF groups whose access to resources depends on their ability to navigate existing social relations of power, have lived through, experienced, and responded to the two stresses. We found the main impact of COVID-19 on SSF actors was the reduction in sales of fish (73.8 % of respondents) likely a result of reduction in local consumption and/or the loss of tourism markets. Loss of purchasing power meant almost a fifth of Indo-Fijian SSF actors interviewed (comprising 44.4 % of crew members, 16.4 % fishers, 11.5 % boat owners, 8.3 % traders) were unable to obtain sufficient food to meet their families’ daily needs. Many of these SSF actors do not have access to social security or similar safety nets leaving them vulnerable to the current crisis as well as to other shocks and changes. Furthermore, social inequities and power relations surrounding access to fisheries resources and government aid contributed to their vulnerability to economic stresses from COVID-19 and a severe cyclone. An understanding of early impacts of COVID-19 on SSF through an intersectional lens can assist decision-makers to quickly mobilise assistance to help people who are most vulnerable, and avoid widening inequities among social groups.

Item Type: Articles
Keywords: Vulnerability, Covid, Cyclone, Fiji, Small-scale Fisheries, Health, Economic Impact, Markets, Fish Consumption, Social Security, Fisheries Resources, Equity
Subjects: Disasters and Climate Change
Depositing User: Jeeva ICSF Rajan
Date Deposited: 21 Jan 2022 10:31
Last Modified: 30 May 2022 06:38
URI: http://icsfarchives.net/id/eprint/10443

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