Politics of technology in the informal governance of destructive fishing in Spermonde, Indonesia
Abstract
Technology has politics and plays a role in societal governance. This article explores the fishing community of Karanrang island (Spermonde Archipelago, Indonesia) to consider how fishing technologies reinforce existing power structures in the local informal governance system. Informal governance actors deploy the politics of technology in order to manage a socially problematic and environmentally destructive fishing economy. In the punggawa-sawi system of patron-client relationships, fishers are economically dependent on patrons, who supply them with fishing technologies like boats, bombs, and cyanide. The patrons themselves are embedded in a complex governance network, encompassing corrupt police and officials, importers, and live food fish traders. The politics of technology contribute to maintaining the local informal governance system of patron-client relationships. This paper draws upon theories from science and technology studies and network governance to argue that although patron-client relationships are problematic in themselves, the politics of technology further maintain power imbalances.
Keywords
Politics of technology Informal governance Science and technology studies Destructive fishing Patron-client relationshipsReferences
- Agnew, J. A. (2013). Territory, politics, governance. Territory, Politics, Governance, 1(1), 1–4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Allison, E. H., & Ellis, F. (2001). The livelihoods approach and management of small-scale fisheries. Marine Policy, 25(5), 377–388.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Baker, R. (1992). Scale and administrative performance: The governance of small states and microstates. In R. Baker (Ed.), Public administration in small and island states (pp. 5–25). West Hartford: Kumarian.Google Scholar
- Baldacchino, G., & Pleijel, C. (2010). European islands, development and the cohesion policy: A case study of Kökar, Åland Islands. Island Studies Journal, 5(1), 89–110.Google Scholar
- Bijker, W. E., et al. (Eds.). (2012). The social construction of technological systems: New directions in the sociology and history of technology. Cambridge: MIT Press.Google Scholar
- Brey, P. (2008). The technological construction of social power. Social Epistemology, 22(1), 71–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Buehler, M. (2010). Decentralisation and local democracy in Indonesia: the marginalisation of the public sphere. In E. Aspinall & M. Mietzner (Eds.), Problems of democratisation in Indonesia: Elections, institutions and society (pp. 267–285). Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.Google Scholar
- Cheong, S. M., & Hazelwood, E. (2014). Insularity and oil spill response in Grand Isle. GeoJournal. doi: 10.1007/s10708-014-9570-x.Google Scholar
- Chozin, M. (2008). Illegal but Common: Life of blast fishermen in the Spermonde Archipelago, South Sulawesi, Indonesia. Unpublished MA thesis, Center for International Studies, Ohio University, June.Google Scholar
- Ellul, J. (1964). The Technological Society. John Wilkinson (Translation). New York: Vintage.Google Scholar
- Fabinyi, M. (2009). The politics of patronage and live reef fish trade regulation in Palawan, Philippines. Human Organization, 68(3), 258–268.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Fabinyi, M. (2011). Fishing for fairness: Poverty, morality and marine resource regulation in the Philippines. Canberra: ANU E Press.Google Scholar
- Feenberg, A. (1992). Subversive rationalization: Technology, power, and democracy 1. Inquiry, 35(3–4), 301–322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Feenberg, A. (2010). Between reason and experience: Essays in technology and modernity. Cambridge: MIT Press.Google Scholar
- Ferse, S. C., et al. (2012). Livelihoods of ornamental coral fishermen in South Sulawesi/Indonesia: Implications for management. Coastal Management, 40(5), 525–555.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Fox, H. E., & Caldwell, R. L. (2006). Recovery from blast fishing on coral reefs: A tale of two scales. Ecological Applications, 16(5), 1631–1635.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Frey, J. B., & Berkes, F. (2014). Can partnerships and community-based conservation reverse the decline of coral reef social-ecological systems? International Journal of the Commons, 8(1), 26–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Galis, V., & Hansson, A. (2012). Partisan scholarship in technoscientific controversies: Reflections on research experience. Science as Culture, 21(3), 335–364.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Gladwell, M. (2011). From innovation to revolution: Do social media make protests possible? Foreign Affairs, 90(2), 153.Google Scholar
- Glaeser, B., & Glaser, M. (2011). People, fish and coral reefs in Indonesia: A contribution to social-ecological research. GAIA, 20(2), 139–141.Google Scholar
- Glaser, M., et al. (2010). ‘Nested’ participation in hierarchical societies? Lessons for social-ecological research and management. International Journal of Society Systems Science, 2(4), 390–414.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Graham, S., & Marvin, S. (2001). Splintering urbanism: Networked infrastructures, technological mobilities and the urban condition. London and New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Grydehøj, A. (2008). Nothing but a Shepherd and his dog: Social and economic effects of depopulation in Fetlar, Shetland. Shima, 2(2), 56–72.Google Scholar
- Grydehøj, A. (2013). Challenges to local government innovation: Legal and institutional impediments to the exercise of innovative economic development policy by subnational jurisdictions. European Journal of Spatial Development, 50, 1–22.Google Scholar
- Grydehøj, A. (2014). Constructing a Centre on the periphery: Urbanization and urban design in the island city of Nuuk, Greenland. Island Studies Journal, 9(2), 205–222.Google Scholar
- Grydehøj, A., & Hayward, P. (2014). Social and economic effects of spatial distribution in island communities: Comparing the Isles of Scilly and Isle of Wight, UK. Journal of Marine and Island Cultures, 3(1), 9–19.Google Scholar
- Hicken, A. (2011). Clientelism. Annual Review of Political Science, 14, 289–310.Google Scholar
- Hjelholt, M. (2011). Localizing national strategies: The circuits of power as a lens. Social Science Research Network. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1995444. Accessed 10 July 2014.
- Je, J. G., et al. (2014). Shapes of fishing gears in relation to the tidal flat bio-organisms and habitat types in Daebu Island Region, Gyeonggi Bay. Journal of Marine and Island Cultures, 3(1), 31–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Karampela, S., et al. (2014). Accessibility of islands: Towards a new geography based on transportation modes and choices. Island Studies Journal, 9(2), 293–306.Google Scholar
- Latour, B. (2002). Morality and technology: The end of the means. C. Venn (Translation). Theory, Culture and Society, 19(5–6), 247–260.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Lowe, C. (2002). Who is to blame? Logics of responsibility in the live reef food fish trade in Sulawesi, Indonesia. SPC Live Reef Fish Information Bulletin, 10, 7–16.Google Scholar
- Marres, N. (2012). Material participation: Technology, the environment and everyday publics. Houndmills and New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- McElroy, J. L., et al. (2014). A note on the significance of geographic location in island studies. Island Studies Journal, 9(2), 363–366.Google Scholar
- Morozov, E. (2012). The net delusion: The dark side of internet freedom. New York: Public Affairs.Google Scholar
- Neumayer, C. (2013). When neo-Nazis march and anti-fascists demonstrate: Protean counterpublics in the digital age. PhD thesis, IT University of Copenhagen. January.Google Scholar
- Neumayer, C. & Valtysson, B. (2013). Tweet against Nazis? Twitter, power, and networked publics in anti-fascist protests. MedieKultur: Journal of Media and Communication Research, 29(55), 3–20.Google Scholar
- Norman, E. S. (2013). Who’s counting? Spatial politics, ecocolonisation and the politics of calculation in Boundary Bay. Area, 45(2), 179–187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Nurdin, N., & Grydehøj, A. (2015). Informal governance through patron-client relationships and destructive fishing in Spermonde Archipelago, Indonesia. Journal of Marine and Island Cultures, 3(2), (forthcoming).Google Scholar
- Pelras, C. (2000). Patron-client ties among the Bugis and Makassarese of South Sulawesi. Bijdragen Tot De Taal-, Land-En Volkenkunde, 156(3), 393–432.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Pet-Soede, L., & Erdmann, M. V. (1998a). Blast fishing in South Sulawesi, Indonesia. Naga—The ICLARM Quarterly, April–June, 4–9.Google Scholar
- Pet-Soede, L., & Erdmann, M. V. (1998b). An overview and comparison of destructive fishing practices in Indonesia. SPC Live Reef Fish Information Bulletin, 4, 28–36.Google Scholar
- Pierre, J., & Peters, B. G. (2000). Governance, politics and the state. Houndmills and London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
- Prasetiamartati, B. (2006). How to invest in social capital? Lessons from managing coral reef ecosystem. Case from South Sulawesi, Indonesia. Eleventh Biennial Conference of IASCP. Proceedings of a conference held in Ubud, Bali, 19–23 June 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10535/394. Accessed 10 July 2014.
- Pugh, J. (2013). Speaking without voice: Participatory planning, acknowledgment, and latent subjectivity in Barbados. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 103(5), 1266–1281.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Radjawali, I. (2012). Examining local conservation and development: Live reef food fishing in Spermonde Archipelago, Indonesia. Journal of Integrated Coastal Zone Management, 12(4), 545–557.Google Scholar
- Rosen, P., & Rappert, B. (1999). The culture and politics of technology. SATSU Working Paper, 14, 1–7.Google Scholar
- Schwerdtner Máñez, K., & Paragay, S. H. (2013). First evidence of targeted moray eel fishing in the Spermonde Archipelago, South Sulawesi, Indonesia. Traffic Bulletin, 25(1), 4–7.Google Scholar
- Shirky, C. (2008). Here comes everybody: The power of organizing without organizations. New York: Penguin.Google Scholar
- Sørensen, E., & Torfing, J. (2007). Theoretical approaches to governance network dynamics. In E. Sørensen & J. Torfing (Eds.), Theories of democratic network governance (pp. 25–42). Houndsmills and New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
- Spilanis, I., et al. (2012). Accessibility of peripheral regions: Evidence from Aegean Islands (Greece). Island Studies Journal, 7(2), 199–214.Google Scholar
- Tatar, B. (2014). The safety of bycatch: South Korean responses to the moratorium on commercial whaling. Journal of Marine and Island Cultures. doi: 10.1016/j.imic.2014.08.002.
- Torfing, J., et al. (2012). Interactive governance: Advancing the paradigm. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Trentmann, F. (2009). Materiality in the future of history: Things, practices, and politics. The Journal of British Studies, 48(02), 283–307.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Tufekci, Z., & Wilson, C. (2012). Social media and the decision to participate in political protest: Observations from Tahrir Square. Journal of Communication, 62(2), 363–379.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Veenendaal, W. (2013). Size and personalistic politics: Characteristics of political competition in four microstates. The Round Table, 102(3), 245–257.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Verbeek, P. P. (2008). Morality in design: Design ethics and the morality of technological artifacts. In P. E. Vermaas, et al. (Eds.), Philosophy and design: From engineering to architecture (pp. 91–103). Dordrecht: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Williams, R., & Edge, D. (1996). The social shaping of technology. Research Policy, 25(6), 865–899.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Winner, L. (1980). Do artifacts have politics? Daedalus, 109(1), 121–136.Google Scholar
- Wynne, B. G. (2007). Social capital and social economy in sub-national island jurisdictions. Island Studies Journal, 2(1), 115–132.Google Scholar