Ecology and Society (Mar 2024)

Envisioning desirable futures in small-scale fisheries: a transdisciplinary arts-based co-creation process

  • Ignacio Gianelli,
  • Micaela Trimble,
  • Silvana Juri,
  • Nazarena A. Beretta,
  • Denisse Torena,
  • Manuela Acosta,
  • Robert Acosta,
  • Mario Del Bó,
  • Jorge A. Fuster,
  • Vanessa González,
  • Diego Kurta,
  • Marcelo Kurta,
  • Tamara López,
  • María E. Marfetán,
  • Pablo Montes de Oca,
  • Alberto Morales,
  • Victoria Pardo,
  • Juan Sandoval,
  • Nancy Schuch,
  • Claudio Taroco,
  • Albert V. Norström,
  • Laura M. Pereira,
  • Sebastián Villasante

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-14869-290120
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 1
p. 20

Abstract

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Despite the critical importance of small-scale fisheries for food security and well-being and the role of fishers as stewards of aquatic ecosystems, their future is uncertain. Tackling narratives that portray small-scale fisheries as obsolete, disparate, and inefficient requires collectively imagining and articulating new, creative, and inspiring narratives that reflect their real contributions and enable transformative futures. Drawing on a transdisciplinary country-level case study, we analyze the process and outcomes of co-creating desirable, plural, and meaningful visions of the future for small-scale fisheries in Uruguay. Using an arts-based approach and leveraging the agency of emerging innovative initiatives throughout the country, different food system actors (fish workers, chefs, entrepreneurs) and knowledge systems (local, experience-based, and scientific) were engaged in a creative visioning process. The results of this arts-based co-creation process include (1) a series of desirable visions and narratives, synthesized into an artistic boundary object; and (2) the stepping stones to a transformative space for collective reflection, learning, and action. Although the artistic boundary object has proven instrumental among multiple and diverse participants, the transformative space encouraged academic and non-academic participants to plan collective actions and to feel more confident, motivated, and optimistic about the future of small-scale fisheries in Uruguay. With this paper we provide a tool, a platform, and a roadmap to counter the dominant bleak narrative, while also communicating the elements that constitute desirable futures for small-scale fisheries in Uruguay. On a broader scale, our contribution reinforces the emerging narrative of the key role that small-scale fisheries have, and will play, in local and global food systems.

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