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FISHERMEN'S COOPERATIVES IN KERALA: A CRITIQUE

Kerala is a state at the southern tip of India. Situated on the southwestern end of the peninsula, it has a 590 km coastline, surfbeaten by the Arabian Sea. The waters off Kerala's shore are known for their resources of fish and crustacea. This bounty, combined with the fact that the state has...

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Dettagli Bibliografici
Autore principale: John Kurien
Natura: Printed Book
Pubblicazione: BAY OF BENGAL PROGRAMME Development of Small-Scale Fisheries 1980
Accesso online:http://10.26.1.76/ks/002561.pdf
LEADER 023300000a22001330004500
100 |a John Kurien 
245 |a FISHERMEN'S COOPERATIVES IN KERALA: A CRITIQUE 
260 |c 1980 
260 |b BAY OF BENGAL PROGRAMME Development of Small-Scale Fisheries 
520 |a Kerala is a state at the southern tip of India. Situated on the southwestern end of the peninsula, it has a 590 km coastline, surfbeaten by the Arabian Sea. The waters off Kerala's shore are known for their resources of fish and crustacea. This bounty, combined with the fact that the state has a daring and enterprising community of traditional small-scale fishermen, accounts for Kerala's continued pre-eminence as the leading producer of marine fish in India. Prior to 1956, the region that is now Kerala consisted of the state of Travancore-Cochin plus the Malabar region which was then part of Madras state. Both the Madras state and the state of Travancore-Cochin had very enlightened fisheries administrations. The Department of Fisheries in Madras came into being as long back as 1906 ; the state of Travancore-Cochin was aware of the vast fishery potential off its shores and planned numerous ways to exploit and utilise this potential. It is therefore not surprising that the first initiatives in cooperative organisation for fishermen were undertaken in the region that is now Kerala state as early as 1917. During the past six decades, cooperative organisation is one of the subjects most widely discussed in the area of fisheries. Yet, one of the most disappointing aspects of development programmes for fishermen relates to cooperatives.This paper is divided into three parts. First, it undertakes a brief analysis of the history and rationale of fishermen's cooperatives in Kerala, so that the main reasons for their failure can be highlighted. Second, it tries to present a theory about the modus operandiof cooperative organisation for the small-scale fishermen of the state - particularly the self employed fishermen. The practical application of this theory is examined in the third part, a case study of a successful small-scale fishermen's cooperative in Trivandrum district of Kerala state  
856 |u http://10.26.1.76/ks/002561.pdf 
942 |c KS 
999 |c 71949  |d 71949 
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