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Collective ownership in the South African small-scale fishing sector: a framework for sustained economic growth

The thesis tested the notion of collective ownership in the small-scale fisheries sector, as advocated by the Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, the South African government department responsible for fisheries administration. More specifically, it examined the conditions under which...

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Main Author: Botha, Mark Jonathan
Other Authors: Uliana, Enrico
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Finance and Tax 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Botha, Mark Jonathan
author2 Uliana, Enrico
author_browse Botha, Mark Jonathan
Uliana, Enrico
author_facet Uliana, Enrico
Botha, Mark Jonathan
author_sort Botha, Mark Jonathan
collection Thesis
description The thesis tested the notion of collective ownership in the small-scale fisheries sector, as advocated by the Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, the South African government department responsible for fisheries administration. More specifically, it examined the conditions under which collective ownership would yield economic benefits to small-scale fishers. This was done according to three constructs, i.e. collective entrepreneurship, agency theory and value chain development. In testing the study’s presuppositions, a sequential qualitative-quantitative mixed methods research methodology was used. Data were gathered through focus group discussions, individual interviews and surveys with fishers from South Africa’s Western Cape and Northern Cape provinces. Qualitative data were analysed through the constant comparative approach preliminary outcomes thereof were used to devise the quantitative instruments, which were analysed with the SPSS statistical package. The outcomes of the quantitative data analysis were then discussed with key participants to validate the findings and to ensure overall congruency. In the current value chain dispensation, small-scale fishers realise approximately 38% of overall revenue accrual, whereas the remaining 62% is realised by fish-processing establishments and exporters. The value chain requires reconfiguration to progressively enable small-scale fishers to own and control all upstream and downstream catch, processing and marketing processes. In addition, greater value can be realised when all regulatory, catch, processing and marketing processes are efficiently aligned with local and export market requirements. The findings note that small-scale fishers require developmental support to exploit opportunities. The study suggests that the required support should be facilitated through a dedicated multi- and interdisciplinary fisheries institute located at a higher education institution. This institute needs to focus on training, advisory services and research, as well as on defined support for the fisheries co-operatives. Moreover, the impact of the envisaged institute provides for the establishment of localised fishing community information centres, located near coastal fishing communities, harbours and slipways. Such centres ought to improve communications, trust-building relations and shared expertise among all actors, namely small-scale fishers, their co-operatives, the various government departments, industrial associations, non-governmental organisations, agencies and all others implicated, to maximise benefit and effectively secure government’s infrastructural investment programme within the small-scale fisheries sector.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:07.122Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Department of Finance and Tax
publisherStr Department of Finance and Tax
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29329 Collective ownership in the South African small-scale fishing sector: a framework for sustained economic growth Botha, Mark Jonathan Uliana, Enrico Wiiliams, J J small-scale fisheries sector The thesis tested the notion of collective ownership in the small-scale fisheries sector, as advocated by the Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, the South African government department responsible for fisheries administration. More specifically, it examined the conditions under which collective ownership would yield economic benefits to small-scale fishers. This was done according to three constructs, i.e. collective entrepreneurship, agency theory and value chain development. In testing the study’s presuppositions, a sequential qualitative-quantitative mixed methods research methodology was used. Data were gathered through focus group discussions, individual interviews and surveys with fishers from South Africa’s Western Cape and Northern Cape provinces. Qualitative data were analysed through the constant comparative approach preliminary outcomes thereof were used to devise the quantitative instruments, which were analysed with the SPSS statistical package. The outcomes of the quantitative data analysis were then discussed with key participants to validate the findings and to ensure overall congruency. In the current value chain dispensation, small-scale fishers realise approximately 38% of overall revenue accrual, whereas the remaining 62% is realised by fish-processing establishments and exporters. The value chain requires reconfiguration to progressively enable small-scale fishers to own and control all upstream and downstream catch, processing and marketing processes. In addition, greater value can be realised when all regulatory, catch, processing and marketing processes are efficiently aligned with local and export market requirements. The findings note that small-scale fishers require developmental support to exploit opportunities. The study suggests that the required support should be facilitated through a dedicated multi- and interdisciplinary fisheries institute located at a higher education institution. This institute needs to focus on training, advisory services and research, as well as on defined support for the fisheries co-operatives. Moreover, the impact of the envisaged institute provides for the establishment of localised fishing community information centres, located near coastal fishing communities, harbours and slipways. Such centres ought to improve communications, trust-building relations and shared expertise among all actors, namely small-scale fishers, their co-operatives, the various government departments, industrial associations, non-governmental organisations, agencies and all others implicated, to maximise benefit and effectively secure government’s infrastructural investment programme within the small-scale fisheries sector. 2019-02-05T10:27:36Z 2019-02-05T10:27:36Z 2018 2019-02-05T07:51:30Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29329 eng Department of Finance and Tax Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle small-scale fisheries sector
Botha, Mark Jonathan
Collective ownership in the South African small-scale fishing sector: a framework for sustained economic growth
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Collective ownership in the South African small-scale fishing sector: a framework for sustained economic growth
title_full Collective ownership in the South African small-scale fishing sector: a framework for sustained economic growth
title_fullStr Collective ownership in the South African small-scale fishing sector: a framework for sustained economic growth
title_full_unstemmed Collective ownership in the South African small-scale fishing sector: a framework for sustained economic growth
title_short Collective ownership in the South African small-scale fishing sector: a framework for sustained economic growth
title_sort collective ownership in the south african small scale fishing sector a framework for sustained economic growth
topic small-scale fisheries sector
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29329
work_keys_str_mv AT bothamarkjonathan collectiveownershipinthesouthafricansmallscalefishingsectoraframeworkforsustainedeconomicgrowth