Life, Fish and Mangroves: Resource Governance in Coastal Cambodia
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Life, Fish and Mangroves - Melissa Marschke
LIFE, FISH AND MANGROVES
Resource governance in coastal Cambodia
Governance Series
Governance is the process of effective coordination whereby an organization or a system guides itself when resources, power, and information are widely distributed. Studying governance means probing the pattern of rights and obligations that underpins organizations and social systems, understanding how they coordinate their parallel activities and maintain their coherence, exploring the sources of dysfunction, and suggesting ways to redesign organizations whose governance is in need of repair.
The series welcomes a range of contributions—from conceptual and theoretical reflections, ethnographic and case studies, and proceedings of conferences and symposia, to works of a very practical nature—that deal with problems or issues on the governance front. The series publishes works both in French and in English.
The Governance Series is part of the publications division of the Centre on Governance and of the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Ottawa. This is the 28th volume published in the series. The Centre on Governance and the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs also publish a quarterly electronic journal, www.optimumonline.ca.
Editorial Committee
Caroline Andrew
Linda Cardinal
Monica Gattinger
Luc Juillet
Daniel Lane
Gilles Paquet (Director)
The published titles in the series are listed at the end of this book.
LIFE, FISH AND MANGROVES
Resource governance in coastal Cambodia
Melissa Marschke
University of Ottawa Press
2012
4a1_nobrand_v_B.ai© University of Ottawa Press, 2012
The University of Ottawa Press acknowledges with gratitude the support extended to its publishing list by Heritage Canada through its Book Publishing Industry Development Program, by the Canada Council for the Arts, by the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences through its Award to Scholarly Publications Program, by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, and by the University of Ottawa.
We also gratefully acknowledge the Centre on Governance and the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Ottawa whose financial support has contributed to the publication of this book.
LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA CATALOGUING IN PUBLICATION
Marschke, Melissa, 1973-
Life, fish and mangroves : resource governance in
coastal Cambodia / Melissa Marschke.
(Governance series, 1487-3052 ; 28)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-7766-0772-6
1. Natural resources--Co-management--Cambodia.
2. Natural resources--Government policy--Cambodia.
3. Fishery co-management--Cambodia.
4. Cambodia--Rural conditions. I. Title.
II. Series: Governance series (Ottawa, Ont.) ; 28
HC442.Z65M37 2012 333.7309596 C2011-908038-9
PDF 978-0-7766-1986-6
ePUB 978-0-7766-1985-9
eBook development by Wild Element, www.WildElement.ca
TABLE OF CONTENTS
List of Figures and Tables
Acknowledgements
Prologue
Introduction
I. Desiring Local Resource Governance
II. Governing a Coveted Resource
III. Life in a Resource-Dependent Village, 1998–2010
IV. Villagers Pursuing Local Resource Governance, 1998–2010
V. Resource Governance across Administrative Units
VI. Probing the Failures
Conclusion: Resource Governance at the Margins
Academic Acknowledgements
References
Index
FIGURES AND TABLES
Figure I: Cambodia and the Research Area
Figure II: Sand Dredging Sites (Black Triangles)
Table I: Cambodia’s Policy Framework for Resource Governance
Table II: Services in Koh Sralao, 1998–2010
Table III: Household Livelihood Details, 1998–2010
Table IV: Stresses Experienced by Villagers, 1998–2010
Table V: Suite of Livelihood Activities, 1998–2010
Table VI: Resource Management Activities, 1998–2010
Table VII: Trying to Handle Gear Theft
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Ihave never had the words to explain adequately my experiences of living, working and conducting research in the mangrove-estuary villages of southwestern Cambodia. I was introduced to the area as a graduate student, continued on as a practitioner facilitating natural resource management activities, became interested in commons dilemmas and rural livelihoods, and am now an academic reflecting upon the entire experience. In this process I have been a long-term witness, and, in a few instances, facilitator, to the ebbs and flows of a twelve-year resource governance experiment. This has served as a catalyst to dig through my field notes and reflect upon this process, do follow-up research and complete this book.
Funding came in the form of an International Development Research Centre (IDRC) Bene Fellowship in Social Forestry (1998), an IDRC International Doctoral Research Award (2002), a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Doctoral Fellowship (2002–2005), a SSHRC-MCRI Post-Doctoral Fellowship (2005–2007), and, most recently, through my start-up funds at the University of Ottawa (2007–2010). Between 1999 and 2001, I worked as a Research Consultant with Canada’s IDRC to support a government-led research team working on facilitating natural resource management planning and activities in southwestern Cambodia. This experience, along with other consultancy and research opportunities that have brought me back to the area, has helped to ensure continuity in my field research.
My list of thanks could easily extend for pages. I am grateful to Dr. Brian Davy, Dr. Gary Newkirk, Toby Carson, Dr. Stephen Tyler and Dr. Hein Mallee, who have continuously supported my involvement in this research and provided engaging discussions on both conceptual and practical ideas. Thanks to Amanda Bradley, Jen Graham, Becky Guieb, Hou Kalyan, Becky Kiniakin, Srey Marona, Sry Mom, Min Muny, Ken Serey Rotha, Katrin Seidel, Nhem Sovanna, Cor Veer and Dr. Emma Wittingham for enthralling, fruitful discussions over the years. Thanks, too, for the lengthy conversations I have had with so many villagers, particularly Dom, Sok, Preun, Sovanna and Wayne. Finally, it was Kim Nong and the entire Participatory Management of Coastal Resources (PMCR) team in all its combinations, including, among others, Ouk Li Khim, Dyna Eam, Khy An, Keo Piseth and Chhin Nith, who made this field work possible, enjoyable and so enriching. Thank you.
I have had excellent academic mentorship. Thanks in particular to Dr. Peter Vandergeest, Dr. Fikret Berkes and Dr. John Sinclair. Thanks, too, to the Challenges of Agrarian Transitions in Southeast Asia (ChATSEA) project team led by Dr. Rudolph de Koninck: I gained a lot from our workshops and meetings throughout the past five years. A special thanks to the re-study gang,
led by Dr. Jonathan Rigg and Dr. Peter Vandergeest. Our rich group discussions enabled me to think about how to discuss change over time, which became a major focus of this manuscript. Thanks to Peter Vandergeest and Ron Jones, who gave feedback on an earlier version of this manuscript, and to my fourth-year students, who lent further pairs of eyes to this project. Here at the University of Ottawa, Dr. Gilles Paquet was ever so patient as I coaxed this manuscript out, giving timely, constructive feedback along the way. I also appreciate the support of Dr. Jim Gardner and Dr. Jonathan Rigg who generously reviewed this manuscript and helped me to sharpen my analysis.
Family and friends, of course, endure such a process and provide the necessary support to make such an endeavour possible. Thanks to Dieter, Dagmar and Jannette Marschke. A special thanks to Mark, whose encouragement, constructive feedback and cosistent support has been simply tremendous.
PROLOGUE
I first visited Koh Sralao village in June 1998. The area surrounding the village had recently (1996) obtained Ramsar site status because of the health and abundance of mangrove trees in this part of the Gulf of Thailand. Being Canadian and new to mangrove ecology, I was awestruck as we boated through the extensive stands of mangroves. Birds flew through the trees, monkeys swung between branches, and I saw expanses of white sand in places. The landscape was truly magnificent. I could see why people were migrating from other parts of Cambodia to live in this resource-rich area.
Six weeks later, however, much of the lush mangrove canopy surrounding the village was gone, particularly at the estuary edges where only trunks of trees remained. Villagers had an opportunity to earn decent money from the sale of mangrove logs in the final days prior to the 1998 national election. This episode of small-scale logging was a product of a particular point in time: officials turning a blind eye toward resource extraction during a chaotic pre-election campaigning period. I was witnessing what I took to be a classic tragedy of the commons scenario, where multiple individual actions were resulting in serious deforestation.
In the years that followed, I continued to visit this village on a near annual basis. With time, villagers halted the mangrove decline and initiated an active mangrove replanting campaign (500 ha), an environmental education campaign, and monitoring and patrolling activities. These local-level experiences fed into national resource governance reforms. Against great odds, villagers had persisted and found a way to maintain their livelihood while also perusing a resource management mandate.
My second shock came in 2010, twelve years after first arriving to this area. On our boat ride towards Koh Sralao village we passed a dozen or so large barges filled with either sand or a serious amount of sand extraction equipment. Then, as we arrived at the village, I saw a dozen or so abandoned stilt-framed houses dotting the shoreline. By way of explanation, I was told that around a sixth of the households had left the village in the past year. People were leaving because of serious declines in the swimming crab population and high debt levels thought to be linked to the sand mining operations that had been taking place near local fishing grounds since 2008. Needless to say, this situation angered and saddened me immensely.
—M. Marschke, field research reflections, June 2010
Cambodia and the Research AreaSource: Ministry of Environment, Cambodia, August 2010.
FIGURE I: Cambodia and the Research Area
INTRODUCTION
I have always found a way to earn money, and as my children got older I have been able to help my village, too. I fished with my father, went into the army, became a dynamite fisher and charcoal kiln owner, returned to dive fishing, started selling goods from home, began work with the village resource management committee and recently was elected onto the commune council.
In general, everything is going well. But I am not sure if the village is such a good place for my children. There are fewer fish, everything is expensive since goods are brought in by boat, and it is hard to protect and manage our natural resources as more people become interested in them. Some people are starting to leave the village, which makes us all think about our future.
—Excerpts from an interview with Wayne Som Sak, Cambodia, 2010
Wayne Som Sak’s reflection upon his livelihood speaks volumes about the changes taking place in the Cambodian countryside. Wayne lives in a mangrove-estuary village surrounded by trees, water and fish. For many years Wayne has been able to make his living from the natural resources found in this area, through selling fish—caught in various ways—and by producing charcoal, among other things. At a certain point, perhaps a decade ago, Wayne became involved in resource management and other village work and diversified into nonfishing activities. Wayne’s comment about it being hard
to protect natural resources hints at the tension between balancing resource extraction with resource protection, and the challenges of enforcing rules when outsiders (other fishers, or those interested in coastal resources) come into the area. Meanwhile, fisheries continue to decline. For these reasons, Wayne is hesitant about the future of life in this village, being unsure if his children will be able to sustain themselves or, given the distance from other services, if they will even want to.
This book is about people, livelihoods and resource governance strategies in coastal Cambodia. I am curious as to how people who are dependent upon the natural resources in and around their village handle the schism between livelihood opportunities that involve some degree of resource extraction and resource governance, particularly in areas where multiple interests compete for the same resources. Cambodia, as a society weighed down by violence and poverty, provides for a particularly illuminating case. Governance reforms due to donor programs and the creation of new policies have set out to improve the condition of the population (Li 2007) through an active democratization process, including emphasizing local resource governance. Although these processes have created formal rules, Cambodia remains a place where formal rules can easily be replaced by the personal and the informal, particularly by those with power (Hughes 2009). This begs the question of how resource governance intersects with rural livelihoods in the Cambodian context.
My focus in this book is on resource governance rather than resource management.¹ I do this because resource managment focuses on the operational decisions necessary to achieve a specific resource outcome, whereas resource governance incorporates politics, the broader processes and institutions through which a policy agenda is set, along with specific rights and responsibilities (Kooiman et al. 2005; Jentoft and Chuenpagdee 2009). Scholars are interested in how relationships between actors can facilitate or hinder how a society transforms the way natural resources are governed (Crona and Hubacek 2010). Therefore, an emphasis on resource governance enables me to consider how decision-making occurs between state and nonstate actors, and how power is exercised over natural resources more generally (Béné 2005; Sneddon and Fox 2007). In doing so, I can pay careful attention to who profits and loses from such processes (Béné and Neiland 2006), the system of rules that are put into place, and what guides these processes (Rosenau 2003). Since resource governance is broader in scope than resource management, I generally use this term except when writing about specific resource or fisheries management activities.
I define resources broadly, to acknowledge the utilitarian and the ecosystem functions provided by natural resources. Traditionally, natural resources have been viewed as assets for human satisfaction or utility, being only of value to the extent that they can also be used to create goods and services (Berkes 2010c). Land, forests and fish were seen as commodities for the market, and industrial, colonial and post-colonial development has been predicated to a certain extent on the exploitation of such natural resources (Bernstein 2010). Natural resources, however, encompass far more than this. Natural resources may provide economic opportunities, health benefits and aesthetic pleasures or add to welfare (Béné et al. 2010) and well-being, and contribute toward regulating and sustaining ecosystems (Biermann and Boas 2010). As such, natural resources are more than a commodity for human use, although this component is important, since they also maintain diversity and contribute toward social-ecological sustainability (Berkes 2010c).
I ground my analysis of resource governance by focusing on livelihood trajectories in one resource-dependent village.² Livelihoods are dynamic, complex and often unpredictable, since goals, preferences, resources and means are constantly reassessed in view of new unstable conditions
(De Haan and Zoomers 2003: 357). A livelihood is more than having to make a living to get by
(Bebbington 1999: 33), rather encompassing a complex web of activities and interactions.³ Accessing livelihood opportunities, which are governed by social relations, institutions and organizations, with power being an important explanatory variable, remains a challenge (De Haan and Zoomers 2005). Livelihood activities are not neutral: they engender processes of inclusion and exclusion. As such, the classic agrarian questions à la Bernstein (2010) of who owns what, who does what, who gets what and what do they do with it are of central importance to a livelihood analysis. For these reasons, livelihood perspectives offer an important lens for looking at complex governance questions (cf. De Haan and Zoomers 2005 and Scoones 2009 for a succinct overview of livelihood studies and its contributions).
My research is framed by an interest in three things: (a) how livelihoods shift, evolve and adapt in villages where numerous actors are vying for access to the same natural resources; (b) the role of decentralized resource governance in situations with high levels of poverty, resource-dependence and social-ecological change; and (c) the potential for other forms of resource governance in such situations. To develop my analysis I pay careful attention to coastal livelihoods and resource-related challenges over a twelve-year period, including how people actually try to achieve specific outcomes. Several texts have been helpful in enabling me to advance my arguments. Key to my thinking has been the work