Cooperative Organization and Responses to Environmental Change in two Rural Communities in Tabasco, Mexico
Abstract
Rural inhabitants in many parts of the world face multiple stressors associated with environmental change, yet local governments often do not promote viable or robust ways for community members to adapt to such stressors. This... [ view full abstract ]
Rural inhabitants in many parts of the world face multiple stressors associated with environmental change, yet local governments often do not promote viable or robust ways for community members to adapt to such stressors. This research draws on qualitative interview data to examine current public perceptions of environmental change and cooperative community organizations’ responses to them in two small, rural ejido (commonly-managed) communities in Tabasco State, Mexico. I compare the successful strategies in a local agricultural cooperative in the Teapa region to another community in the Emiliano Zapata region, where a fishing association has been unable to use the organization to benefit the greater public, rather than just its members. In Teapa have made the most of common property management (via ejido common land) and preservation of common pool resources. In contrast, in Emiliano Zapata, extreme weather events and invasive fish species in the river and a lack of arable land have forced people to abandon fishing and find alternative livelihoods through migration to other locations or work in proximate urban areas. People have lost hope in their ability to depend on the environment in the face of dwindling natural resources and a polluted river. I compare the potential resilience and vulnerabilities in the socioecological systems in both regions and suggest ways that such cooperative organizations’ strategies may be employed by members of rural communities in other countries where global environmental change is negatively impacting people’s livelihoods.
Authors
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Erin Pischke
(Michigan Technological University)
Topic Area
International Development & Studies
Session
SID.67 » Social Capital and Collective Action: Models, Theories, and Practical Applications (11:00 - Sunday, 29th July, Weyerhaeuser)