Enclosing the oceans and our aquatic resources Myanmar’s Next Great Transformation

Fecha de publicación:

Top-down conservation projects, (Eco-)tourism, large-scale aquaculture and the expansion of industrial infrastructure are transforming Myanmar. Myanmar's coastal and inland aquatic resources are vast, but these evolving processes and dynamics raise important questions about who benefits from using these resources, who gets to access them and where control lies.

Sobre enclosing the oceans and our aquatic resources

Tipo de publicación
Report
Part of series
Special Reports

Myanmar is on the front lines of a new cycle of transformation. A wide array of changes in access to and control of the country’s vast coastal and inland aquatic resources are unfolding in Myanmar today. Aquatic resources include fish, mangroves, coral reefs and other plants, the sand and the coast, oil and gas resources, the water itself, and much more. These resources play a vital role in the lives and livelihoods of Fisher peoples’ lives and livelihoods in Myanmar. These new dynamics threaten to take these resources out of the hands of villagers and the country as a whole, and place them firmly in an increasingly ubiquitous market-system.

The varied processes of enclosure currently unfolding across Myanmar raise important questions about who has access to and control over the country’s aquatic resources and who benefits from using them.

Did you enjoy this content? Then please consider supporting TNI.

Support our crucial research and help us to work on the critical issues of our time. We work at the crossroads of movements, activists, policy makers and scholars to enhance public debate and turn ideas into movement. Become a supporter now.

Ideas en movimiento

Impulsa nuestra labor

Si deseas apoyar nuestro trabajo, considera realizar una donación. Nos comprometemos a que nuestra valiosa investigación esté accesible sin costo, pero para eso necesitamos de tu ayuda. Si todas las personas que leen nuestro contenido realizan una donación de tan solo €12 podremos apoyar nuestro trabajo durante tres años.

Done Ahora