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The tragedy of the commodity is not inevitable: Indigenous resistance prevents high-value fisheries collapse in the Pacific islands
Affiliation:1. Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA;2. The Peopled Seas Initiative, Vancouver, Canada;3. People and the Ocean Specialist Group, Commission on Environmental, Economic and Social Policy, International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN CEESP), Gland, Switzerland;4. Micronesia Conservation Trust, Pohnpei, FSM, Canada;5. Kewalo Marine Laboratory, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, Honolulu, Hawai’i, Canada;6. Ebiil Society, Ollei, Palau
Abstract:The emergence of export markets for high-value seafood products tends to produce a predictable pattern of serial depletion of resources and social disruption in coastal communities, a phenomenon described as ‘the tragedy of the commodity’. The sea cucumber trade epitomizes these challenges, with cases of rapid growth followed by fishery collapse documented across the Indo-Pacific and the majority of assessed stocks worldwide overexploited. Is this ‘boom-bust’ sequence inevitable? We examine three cases of resistance to the sea cucumber trade from Palau, Pohnpei, and Yap. Despite the overwhelming short-term financial incentives to export, fishers, youth, elected and traditional leaders, and civil society organizations coordinated to ban the trade at its peak, using public protest, court battles, and customary and statutory law. We show that, like the tragedy of the commons, Indigenous peoples and local communities can organize to resist the tragedy of the commodity. They do so by asserting Indigenous values, rights, and institutions, recommonizing the resource and preventing fisheries collapse. These cases challenge the inevitability of the tragedy of the commodity and the narrative of poor fishers as vulnerable and disempowered.
Keywords:Trade  Resistance  Social movements  Commodity fisheries  Sea cucumber
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