When the Fish Are Gone
Ecological Collapse and the Social Organization of Fishing in Northwest Newfoundland, 1982-1995
The Gulf Coast fisheries off Northwest Newfoundland provide a graphic example of the social and biological consequences of the failure to create conditions that would allow for fishing on a sustainable basis. This book shows how an ecological crisis has produced a social crisis threatening the viability of fishers, the fish plants where they sold their fish, and the communities in which they live. It is set in the context of the North Atlantic fisheries and of primary resource producing rural areas in mature capitalist societies.
About the book
The Gulf Coast fisheries off Northwest Newfoundland provide a graphic example of the social and biological consequences of the failure to create conditions that would allow for fishing on a sustainable basis. This book shows how an ecological crisis has produced a social crisis threatening the viability of fishers, the fish plants where they sold their fish, and the communities in which they live. It is set in the context of the North Atlantic fisheries and of primary resource producing rural areas in mature capitalist societies.
Contents
- Introduction
- The Rise of the Dragger Fleet, 1965-1982
- Load n’ Go, 1983-1987
- Social Divisions and Social Cohesion
- The Fall, 1988-1992
- The Closure, 1993-1995
- The Future of Domestic Commodity Production