Abstract
In a growing number of cases throughout Africa, communities' resource bases are being undermined or appropriated by outsiders, a process which seriously threatens the continuation of local cultures and livelihoods. In this article, we use a political ecology framework to examine how the linked processes of economic development, political power, and environmental change are transgressing the rights of fishing communities on the shores of Lake Malawi. In the cases described, these communities, or community members within them, find themselves powerless to prevent the expropriation of the resources over which they previously had either legal or customary control. Thus, it is not the economic processes of dispossession alone which lead to human rights violations but rather dispossession combined with an authoritarian political context.
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Derman, B., Ferguson, A. Human rights, environment, and development: The dispossession of fishing communities on Lake Malawi. Hum Ecol 23, 125–142 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01191646
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01191646