As part of the Université Paris Cité’s commitment to global engagement, creativity and critical knowledge and research, the Paris Graduate School of East Asian Studies is organizing a series of lectures by international scholars for the 2024-2025 academic year.
Cycle de conférences : Current Research on East Asia
Moderator : Marie Gibert-Flutre
Edyta ROSZKO
Research professor in Social Anthropology, Chr. Michelsen Institute
Topic: “Vietnamese and Chinese fisheries and militia in the common maritime space of the South China sea”
Oceans have always been arenas of crime, poaching, drugs and human trafficking. When such violations occur on fishing boats, they fall under the rubric of “fisheries crime”. Political scientists and economists have tended to assume that these criminal fishers simply abandon their legal occupation and take up illegal practices, labelled “transnational organized fisheries crime” by the United Nations. On the other hand, some scholars have also argued that fishers in the South China Sea are simply responding to regulations, non-enforcement of regulations and incentives. Such present-centric approaches both obscure the modalities of fishers’ embodied skills and knowledge and their motivations, and downplay the inter-ethnic networks that connected different fishers beyond state territories and localized fishing grounds in past and present. Charting the spike in maritime trespass in (and out of) the South China Sea, this lecture combines ethnography and historiography to show how fishers move in and out of legal and illegal, state and non-state categories of fisher, poacher, trader, or smuggler. It discusses how fishers’ practices reflect wider interconnections between modern, state-supported, and technology-driven fisheries with older pre-nation-state patterns of mobility and knowledge accumulated through generations, producing new forms of versatility that operate under the states’ radars.