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Contested claims over space and identity between fishers and the oil industry in Mexico
Institution:1. National University of Singapore, Department of Geography, AS2, #03-01, 1 Arts Link Kent Ridge, Singapore 117570, Singapore;2. Royal Holloway University of London, Department of Geography, Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX, United Kingdom;1. California Sea Grant Extension Program, UC Santa Cruz Institute of Marine Sciences, Center for Ocean Health, 100 Shaffer Rd., Santa Cruz, CA 95060, USA;2. MIT Sea Grant College Program, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, E38-300, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA;3. Marine Resource Management Program, OSU College of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, School of Public Policy, Oregon Sea Grant, 104 CEOAS Admin Building, Corvallis, OR 97331-5503, USA
Abstract:This essay examines neoliberal forms of resource governance and emerging struggles over control of sea space between coastal fishers, the para-statal oil industry and government authorities in the State of Tabasco, Mexico. The analysis focuses on the changing mechanisms of resource governance and networking related to contested claims over rights to offshore space. The study is based on material collected during ethnographic field research in Tabasco in 2011–2014. By linking a post-Foucauldian approach to governmentality with a Deleuzian perspective on networks, our research examines resource governance as a socio-political arena, constructed in negotiation between multiple governmental, private and civil society actors, including heterogeneous groups from local populations. The study demonstrates how hybrid techniques of resource governance lead to fishers’ socio-spatial displacement, marginalization in the fields of political representation and subjection to ideas of aquaculture entrepreneurship. The ensemble of private regulation and governmental control provides a venue for drawing fishers into clientelist practices of governing while it diffuses questions of responsibility. These modes of governance fragment the fishers’ efforts to mobilize politically, making them rely on less visible networks of contestation shaped by heterogeneous fishing groups, with varying access to resources and political representation. Recent transformations in environmental legislation and the fishers’ mobile tactics of networking may offer opportunities for them to reclaim their resource rights.
Keywords:Fishers  Governance  Identity  Oil industry  Mexico  Space
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