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An ethnography of St Helena Bay - A West Coast Town in the age of neoliberalism

This dissertation uses ethnography as a means to examine how multiple-scale patterns of interaction between social and ecological systems as they manifest locally in St Helena Bay. The growing integration of the West Coast has brought rapid change in the form of industrial production, urban developm...

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Main Author: Shultz, O
Other Authors: Green, Lesley
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Social Anthropology 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Shultz, O
author2 Green, Lesley
author_browse Green, Lesley
Shultz, O
author_facet Green, Lesley
Shultz, O
author_sort Shultz, O
collection Thesis
description This dissertation uses ethnography as a means to examine how multiple-scale patterns of interaction between social and ecological systems as they manifest locally in St Helena Bay. The growing integration of the West Coast has brought rapid change in the form of industrial production, urban development and in-migration. The pressure placed on local resources by these processes has been exacerbated by the rationalisation of the local fisheries - there are fewer jobs in the formal industry and small-scale fishing rights have become circumscribed. In the neighbourhood of Laingville, historically-contingent racial categories have become reinvigorated in a context resource scarcity. An autochthonous cultural heritage related to the West Coast has become transposed onto the category of 'real' or 'bona fide' fishers. For those who claim this identity, it serves as a means to legitimate claims to resources while simultaneously excluding the claims of others. A pattern of recurring dichotomies emerges as a defining motif capturing the sense among local people that threatening elements from 'outside' are imposing themselves on the local socio-ecology. For small-scale fishers, the lack of recognition by the state of what they believe is their autochthonous right to access to the marine commons feeds an intense sense of frustration. The act of breaking 'the rules' of the state is perceived by many as an assertion of their rights and thus, of their dignity. In the case of poaching, it is seen by fishers as a means to become an active agent in one's own life, while at the same time making more money than could be made if fishing rules were adhered to. Because of these powerful symbolic and material motivations for breaking the rules, it is something that many people take pride in doing. In contradistinction to this, following the rules of the state is seen as collaborating with the state in undermining one's own socio-economic conditions, and, significantly, in negating one's birthright. For many fishers in Laingville, adhering to the rules is infused stigma
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:23.309Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
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publisher Social Anthropology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/14266 An ethnography of St Helena Bay - A West Coast Town in the age of neoliberalism Shultz, O Green, Lesley Social Anthopology This dissertation uses ethnography as a means to examine how multiple-scale patterns of interaction between social and ecological systems as they manifest locally in St Helena Bay. The growing integration of the West Coast has brought rapid change in the form of industrial production, urban development and in-migration. The pressure placed on local resources by these processes has been exacerbated by the rationalisation of the local fisheries - there are fewer jobs in the formal industry and small-scale fishing rights have become circumscribed. In the neighbourhood of Laingville, historically-contingent racial categories have become reinvigorated in a context resource scarcity. An autochthonous cultural heritage related to the West Coast has become transposed onto the category of 'real' or 'bona fide' fishers. For those who claim this identity, it serves as a means to legitimate claims to resources while simultaneously excluding the claims of others. A pattern of recurring dichotomies emerges as a defining motif capturing the sense among local people that threatening elements from 'outside' are imposing themselves on the local socio-ecology. For small-scale fishers, the lack of recognition by the state of what they believe is their autochthonous right to access to the marine commons feeds an intense sense of frustration. The act of breaking 'the rules' of the state is perceived by many as an assertion of their rights and thus, of their dignity. In the case of poaching, it is seen by fishers as a means to become an active agent in one's own life, while at the same time making more money than could be made if fishing rules were adhered to. Because of these powerful symbolic and material motivations for breaking the rules, it is something that many people take pride in doing. In contradistinction to this, following the rules of the state is seen as collaborating with the state in undermining one's own socio-economic conditions, and, significantly, in negating one's birthright. For many fishers in Laingville, adhering to the rules is infused stigma 2015-10-25T16:52:40Z 2015-10-25T16:52:40Z 2010 Master Thesis Masters MSocSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14266 eng application/pdf Social Anthropology Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Social Anthopology
Shultz, O
An ethnography of St Helena Bay - A West Coast Town in the age of neoliberalism
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An ethnography of St Helena Bay - A West Coast Town in the age of neoliberalism
title_full An ethnography of St Helena Bay - A West Coast Town in the age of neoliberalism
title_fullStr An ethnography of St Helena Bay - A West Coast Town in the age of neoliberalism
title_full_unstemmed An ethnography of St Helena Bay - A West Coast Town in the age of neoliberalism
title_short An ethnography of St Helena Bay - A West Coast Town in the age of neoliberalism
title_sort ethnography of st helena bay a west coast town in the age of neoliberalism
topic Social Anthopology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14266
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