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Loss and damage in fisheries : Building on fishers’ situated knowledge to inform ways of knowing

N'guetta, Alicia LU orcid (2025) In Maritime Studies 24.
Abstract
Loss and damage in fisheries is acknowledged in climate change policy and science but is both undefined and contested, and there is a lack of empirical exploration of the topic. This paper presents the first in-depth, empirical analysis of how fishers’ situated knowledge of socio-ecological changes can inform our understanding of loss and damage in fisheries. The paper conducts a case study from Martinique using qualitative methods, and applying an interpretivist approach. The results show that fishers hold knowledge relating to seascapes. This relation is affected by historical socio-ecological processes that intersect with climate change and which have shaped their perception of loss and damage as an issue of social justice. The findings... (More)
Loss and damage in fisheries is acknowledged in climate change policy and science but is both undefined and contested, and there is a lack of empirical exploration of the topic. This paper presents the first in-depth, empirical analysis of how fishers’ situated knowledge of socio-ecological changes can inform our understanding of loss and damage in fisheries. The paper conducts a case study from Martinique using qualitative methods, and applying an interpretivist approach. The results show that fishers hold knowledge relating to seascapes. This relation is affected by historical socio-ecological processes that intersect with climate change and which have shaped their perception of loss and damage as an issue of social justice. The findings highlight the predominance of environmental loss and damage (e.g. loss of species) and its impacts on fishers’ everyday lives. Yet the findings also reveal the complexity of defining the temporality of environmental loss and damage; by contrast, some societal loss and damage is more definable over time. The findings emphasise that fishers’ knowledge can inform ways of understanding loss and damage. The current understanding of loss and damage is too narrow, being based mainly on extreme events and economic and ex-post valuations. This research emphasises the inherent relationality of loss and damage, both internally and in relation to socio-ecological processes occurring in fishers’ everyday lives, which is informative for adaptation limits and the interactions between society, climate and biodiversity. This paper argues for broader conception of loss and damage in fisheries that recognise situated epistemologies, which are metaphorically shaped by and adaptive to the dynamic movements of seascapes. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Maritime Studies
volume
24
article number
66
ISSN
2212-9790
DOI
10.1007/s40152-025-00447-8
project
Marine Coastal Ecosystems Biodiversity and Services in a Changing World
Recasting the disproportionate impacts of climate change extremes
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
0f7ee08f-8d1c-45bb-91aa-cb4d8e5b6d63
date added to LUP
2025-10-24 11:39:58
date last changed
2025-10-24 15:25:54
@article{0f7ee08f-8d1c-45bb-91aa-cb4d8e5b6d63,
  abstract     = {{Loss and damage in fisheries is acknowledged in climate change policy and science but is both undefined and contested, and there is a lack of empirical exploration of the topic. This paper presents the first in-depth, empirical analysis of how fishers’ situated knowledge of socio-ecological changes can inform our understanding of loss and damage in fisheries. The paper conducts a case study from Martinique using qualitative methods, and applying an interpretivist approach. The results show that fishers hold knowledge relating to seascapes. This relation is affected by historical socio-ecological processes that intersect with climate change and which have shaped their perception of loss and damage as an issue of social justice. The findings highlight the predominance of environmental loss and damage (e.g. loss of species) and its impacts on fishers’ everyday lives. Yet the findings also reveal the complexity of defining the temporality of environmental loss and damage; by contrast, some societal loss and damage is more definable over time. The findings emphasise that fishers’ knowledge can inform ways of understanding loss and damage. The current understanding of loss and damage is too narrow, being based mainly on extreme events and economic and ex-post valuations. This research emphasises the inherent relationality of loss and damage, both internally and in relation to socio-ecological processes occurring in fishers’ everyday lives, which is informative for adaptation limits and the interactions between society, climate and biodiversity. This paper argues for broader conception of loss and damage in fisheries that recognise situated epistemologies, which are metaphorically shaped by and adaptive to the dynamic movements of seascapes.}},
  author       = {{N'guetta, Alicia}},
  issn         = {{2212-9790}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  series       = {{Maritime Studies}},
  title        = {{Loss and damage in fisheries : Building on fishers’ situated knowledge to inform ways of knowing}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40152-025-00447-8}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s40152-025-00447-8}},
  volume       = {{24}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}