This paper, based on fieldwork results, explores traditional management systems (TMS) in the and zone fisheries of north-eastern Nigeria with particular reference to their impact on rural poverty. The first section provides a historical background by tracing the evolution of the TMS since the nineteenth century, with reference to government policy on fisheries management and poverty alleviation. The second gives an overview of TMS, including definitions, distribution, principal objectives, regulatory mechanisms and the impact of TMS on the performance of the fisheries and on the livelihoods of rural people. The third considers the perceptions and attitudes of the fishing communities with regards to the fisheries and TMS. The paper concludes, paradoxically, that while TMS provide a basisfor the sustainable livelihoods of many fishing people, they also reflect and enforce the social positions of the rich and powerful members of society who oversee them, at the expense of the poor. In the future, poverty alleviation in fisheries will need to incorporate both sectoral and non-sectoral strategies - dealing with the existing 'paradox of TMS' by encouraging appropriate institutional changes and community development, and recognizing the importance of employment creation in other sectors of the economy as a source of alternative income. © Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.
CITATION STYLE
Neiland, A. E., Madakan, S. P., & Béné, C. (2005). Traditional management systems, poverty and change in the arid zone fisheries of northern Nigeria. Journal of Agrarian Change, 5(1), 117–148. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-0366.2004.00096.x