Figure 2 - uploaded by Mohamed Faslan
Content may be subject to copyright.
Source publication
Every southwest monsoon, men and women from the west coast fishing villages migrate to east coast villages, leaving their homes and their children and their school-age children behind with kin. This monograph is an exploration of the motivations and aspirations that drive an internal process of seasonal fisheries migration. It focusses on the gende...
Similar publications
This article emanated from a research that dealt with a crosscountry research project on Gender, migration and fisheries in Asia-Cambodia, India and Sri Lanka. The project aimed at providing a critical understanding of changes taken place among the fishing communities in these countries within the context of depleting natural resources, social conf...
Citations
... Apart from the new vulnerability domain of civil war and post-war torments, another critical finding of this study is the issues around local bottom trawlers in the northern part of the country. Few studies of southern migratory fishers in the ocean around northern Sri Lanka are available (Koralagama & Bavinck, 2018;Koralagamage, 2020;Weeratunge et al., 2021). However, the absence of research studies on local bottom trawlers from Jaffna or the northern region is a critical concern since excessive attention is being paid to poaching Indian bottom trawlers and migratory southern fishers. ...
Vulnerability studies have often centered on climate change and catastrophic
climatic events. Contrary to this trend, this study explores the multidimensional
vulnerabilities faced by small-scale fisheries (SSFs) in the Jaffna peninsula of
Sri Lanka. We employed the Integrated Vulnerability Analysis for
Sustainability (IVAS) Framework for this analysis. Data was collected through
focus group discussions and key informant interviews using semi-structured
questionnaires. We analyzed our data following Reflexive Thematic Analysis
using ATLAS.ti software and identified 15 vulnerability drivers across five
domains specific to the local context, revealing that SSFs in the Jaffna peninsula
are highly susceptible to multiple vulnerabilities. Notably, the analysis brought
to light a previously uncharted domain of vulnerability stemming from the
residual effects of civil war and the lingering root causes of ethnic conflict.
However, the interplay between multiple drivers of vulnerabilities, spanning
from societal to environmental factors, underscores the importance of adopting
multidimensional approaches in vulnerability analysis and policy formulation.
This study may be a pioneer of its kind, as the findings provide new insights
into multidimensional vulnerability analysis while providing a comprehensive
and holistic approach for future studies.