Territories of state-led aquaculture risk management : Thailand’s Plang Yai program

The Thai aquaculture sector faces a range of production, market and financial risks that extend beyond the private space of farms to include public spaces and shared resources. The Thai state has attempted to manage these shared risks through its Plang Yai (or ‘Big Area’) agricultural extension program. Using the lens of territorialization, this paper investigates how, through the Plang Yai program, risk management is institutionalized through spatially explicit forms of collaboration amongst farmers and between farmers and (non-)state actors. We focus on how four key policy instruments brought together under Plang Yai delimited multiple territories of risk management over shrimp and tilapia production in Chantaburi and Chonburi provinces. Our findings demonstrate how these policy instruments address risks through dissimilar but overlapping territories that are selectively biased toward facilitating the individual management of production risks, whilst enabling both the individual and collective management of market and financial risks. This raises questions about the suitability of addressing aquaculture risks by controlling farmer behavior through state-led designation of singular, spatially explicit areas. The findings also indicate the multiple roles of the state in territorializing risk management, providing a high degree of flexibility, which is especially valuable in landscapes shared by many users, connected to (global) value chains and facing diverse risks. In doing so we demonstrate that understanding the territorialization of production landscapes in a globalizing world requires a dynamic approach recognizing the multiplicity of territories that emerge in risk management processes.

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Main Authors: Bottema, Mariska J.M., Bush, Simon R., Oosterveer, Peter
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Thailand, aquaculture, area management, risk management, territorialization,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/territories-of-state-led-aquaculture-risk-management-thailands-pl
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5713842024-10-02 Bottema, Mariska J.M. Bush, Simon R. Oosterveer, Peter Article/Letter to editor Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space 39 (2021) 6 ISSN: 2399-6544 Territories of state-led aquaculture risk management : Thailand’s Plang Yai program 2021 The Thai aquaculture sector faces a range of production, market and financial risks that extend beyond the private space of farms to include public spaces and shared resources. The Thai state has attempted to manage these shared risks through its Plang Yai (or ‘Big Area’) agricultural extension program. Using the lens of territorialization, this paper investigates how, through the Plang Yai program, risk management is institutionalized through spatially explicit forms of collaboration amongst farmers and between farmers and (non-)state actors. We focus on how four key policy instruments brought together under Plang Yai delimited multiple territories of risk management over shrimp and tilapia production in Chantaburi and Chonburi provinces. Our findings demonstrate how these policy instruments address risks through dissimilar but overlapping territories that are selectively biased toward facilitating the individual management of production risks, whilst enabling both the individual and collective management of market and financial risks. This raises questions about the suitability of addressing aquaculture risks by controlling farmer behavior through state-led designation of singular, spatially explicit areas. The findings also indicate the multiple roles of the state in territorializing risk management, providing a high degree of flexibility, which is especially valuable in landscapes shared by many users, connected to (global) value chains and facing diverse risks. In doing so we demonstrate that understanding the territorialization of production landscapes in a globalizing world requires a dynamic approach recognizing the multiplicity of territories that emerge in risk management processes. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/territories-of-state-led-aquaculture-risk-management-thailands-pl 10.1177/2399654420965241 https://edepot.wur.nl/534474 Thailand aquaculture area management risk management territorialization https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Thailand
aquaculture
area management
risk management
territorialization
Thailand
aquaculture
area management
risk management
territorialization
spellingShingle Thailand
aquaculture
area management
risk management
territorialization
Thailand
aquaculture
area management
risk management
territorialization
Bottema, Mariska J.M.
Bush, Simon R.
Oosterveer, Peter
Territories of state-led aquaculture risk management : Thailand’s Plang Yai program
description The Thai aquaculture sector faces a range of production, market and financial risks that extend beyond the private space of farms to include public spaces and shared resources. The Thai state has attempted to manage these shared risks through its Plang Yai (or ‘Big Area’) agricultural extension program. Using the lens of territorialization, this paper investigates how, through the Plang Yai program, risk management is institutionalized through spatially explicit forms of collaboration amongst farmers and between farmers and (non-)state actors. We focus on how four key policy instruments brought together under Plang Yai delimited multiple territories of risk management over shrimp and tilapia production in Chantaburi and Chonburi provinces. Our findings demonstrate how these policy instruments address risks through dissimilar but overlapping territories that are selectively biased toward facilitating the individual management of production risks, whilst enabling both the individual and collective management of market and financial risks. This raises questions about the suitability of addressing aquaculture risks by controlling farmer behavior through state-led designation of singular, spatially explicit areas. The findings also indicate the multiple roles of the state in territorializing risk management, providing a high degree of flexibility, which is especially valuable in landscapes shared by many users, connected to (global) value chains and facing diverse risks. In doing so we demonstrate that understanding the territorialization of production landscapes in a globalizing world requires a dynamic approach recognizing the multiplicity of territories that emerge in risk management processes.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Thailand
aquaculture
area management
risk management
territorialization
author Bottema, Mariska J.M.
Bush, Simon R.
Oosterveer, Peter
author_facet Bottema, Mariska J.M.
Bush, Simon R.
Oosterveer, Peter
author_sort Bottema, Mariska J.M.
title Territories of state-led aquaculture risk management : Thailand’s Plang Yai program
title_short Territories of state-led aquaculture risk management : Thailand’s Plang Yai program
title_full Territories of state-led aquaculture risk management : Thailand’s Plang Yai program
title_fullStr Territories of state-led aquaculture risk management : Thailand’s Plang Yai program
title_full_unstemmed Territories of state-led aquaculture risk management : Thailand’s Plang Yai program
title_sort territories of state-led aquaculture risk management : thailand’s plang yai program
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/territories-of-state-led-aquaculture-risk-management-thailands-pl
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