Family Farming Knowledge Platform

Shifting Undercurrents: Women seaweed collectors of Gulf of Mannar, India

The 5000 odd women who free-dive to collect seaweed in the Gulf of Mannar Marine National Park off the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu find themselves struggling for their livelihoods now that their activities have been greatly curtailed. The Gulf of Mannar was declared a marine national park in 1986 under India's Wildlife (Protection) Act (WLPA) of 1972, under which resource extraction from national parks is taboo. Since 2000, seaweed collectors and fishers have borne the brunt of the Forest Department's zeal to implement the law. Despite large-scale industrial pollution, overfishing by mechanized vessels and commercial cultivation of exotic seaweed species, enforcement efforts primarily target the small-scale livelihood activities of local communities Sadly, the women's efforts to self-regulate their activities to minimize the impacts on corals have not been recognized or supported, and they are still treated as 'thieves'.

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Author: ICSF
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Organization: International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF)
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Year: 2012
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Country/ies: India
Geographical coverage: Asia and the Pacific
Type: Video
Content language: English
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