Fishing (in) the past to inform the future : lessons from Lake Malawi and Mbenji Island
Wilson, David and Chirwa, Elias and Nkhoma, Bryson and Gough, Milo and Knapp, Charles W. and Morse, Tracy and Mulwafu, Wapulumuka (2025) Fishing (in) the past to inform the future : lessons from Lake Malawi and Mbenji Island. Marine Policy, 173. 106589. ISSN 0308-597X (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2025.106589)
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Abstract
Without historical interrogation of past and present fisheries management, governors and their sponsors often fall into the trap of replicating and reproducing failed approaches. Even when aimed at community empowerment, a lack of historical awareness can lead to underappreciation of the institutional, economic, and socio-ecological contexts that resource users navigate. In this article, we explore the history of fisheries management in Lake Malawi through comparative investigation of two enduring management regimes that developed in the mid-twentieth century: centralised fisheries management and the chief-led regime at Mbenji Island. We argue that the long-term successes of Mbenji Island fisheries in comparison to under-resourced and patchy governmental management has resulted from targeted technical regulations combined with robust leadership, proactive enforcement, sustained ecological and economic benefits, transparent processes, and embeddedness in existing institutions and beliefs. Yet, this regime has not existed in isolation from centralised management but, instead, has been directly and indirectly impacted by it. Pairing comparative historical analysis with analysis of fish specimens and water quality, we consider the underlying principles, long-term outcomes, and entanglements of these two regimes. Such an approach offers important insights into questions of governance legitimacy, the feedback between management regimes, and the role of science within management. Ultimately, the findings reported in this paper agree with recent surveys emphasising the need to focus on processes centred on participation and capacity building rather than set ecological outcomes within small-scale fisheries management. However, we argue that this requires deep historical awareness and reflection that is too often neglected.
ORCID iDs
Wilson, David ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7992-901X, Chirwa, Elias, Nkhoma, Bryson, Gough, Milo, Knapp, Charles W. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7997-8543, Morse, Tracy ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4185-9471 and Mulwafu, Wapulumuka;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 91798 Dates: DateEvent31 March 2025Published13 January 2025Published Online1 October 2024SubmittedSubjects: Agriculture > Aquaculture. Fisheries. Angling Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Humanities > History
Faculty of Engineering > Civil and Environmental EngineeringDepositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 14 Jan 2025 20:14 Last modified: 17 Jan 2025 12:54 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/91798