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This volume studies the coastal and riparian fishing communities of three Asian countries - Cambodia, India and Sri Lanka. It explores issues of migration and movement, gender relations, wellbeing, and nature-society relations common among these communities, and studies the impacts of internal and external pressures such as changing state policies, increased market exposure and unstable environmental situations. It also discusses the changes needed to ensure safe migration, social inclusion and the gendered well-being of fishers in these countries, and identifies the roles that social networks…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This volume studies the coastal and riparian fishing communities of three Asian countries - Cambodia, India and Sri Lanka. It explores issues of migration and movement, gender relations, wellbeing, and nature-society relations common among these communities, and studies the impacts of internal and external pressures such as changing state policies, increased market exposure and unstable environmental situations. It also discusses the changes needed to ensure safe migration, social inclusion and the gendered well-being of fishers in these countries, and identifies the roles that social networks and collective action play in bringing about these improvements. Fisherfolk in Cambodia, India and Sri Lanka presents a rigorously investigated account of the peoples and production systems of some of Asia's most populated and contested but dynamic and productive coasts and floodplains. The book will be of importance to students and researchers of Asian studies, development studies, geography, sociology, migration studies, gender studies, and minority studies.
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Autorenporträt
Ragnhild Lund is Professor of Geography in the Department of Geography, Norwegian University of Science and Technology. Her research focuses on three broad areas: gender and development (livelihoods, body space, activism, rethinking and reproducing gender, gender-based violence); mobility and migration (mobile livelihoods, development-induced displacement, gendered mobility, indigenous people); and social geography (cultural encounters, youths, children, friends, house and home, post-war and post-disaster recovery). She has published extensively in international peer-reviewed journals and books, and has led several large research projects in Asia. Kyoko Kusakabe is Professor of Gender and Development Studies, Department of Development and Sustainability, School of Environment, Resources and Development, Asian Institute of Technology (AIT), Thailand. Her main research interests are in gender and work, especially around labour migration, unpaid work and unpaid care work, and informal economy, as well as fisheries and aquaculture. She has worked extensively with other academics, as well as with local NGOs and groups, governments, and both international and UN organizations. Nitya Rao is Professor of Gender and Development in the School of International Development, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK. She has worked extensively as a researcher and advocate in the field of women's rights, employment and education for over three decades. Her research interests include exploring the gendered changes in land and agrarian relations, and migration and livelihoods, especially in contexts of climatic variability and economic precarity. She has conducted fine-grained research on intra-household dynamics in these contexts to draw out implications for gendered well-being, with a focus on food and nutrition security. She has published extensively in international peer-reviewed journals and books. Nireka Weeratunge is an anthropologist and research fellow at the International Centre for Ethnic Studies (ICES) in Colombo, Sri Lanka. Her main areas of research are the social and cultural aspects of natural resource use, focusing on gender and livelihood strategies in relation to poverty, vulnerability, well-being, and the resilience of rural households in fishing and farming communities. She has a PhD in anthropology from the University of Toronto, Canada.