The sustainability of small-scale fishing households in the pandemic era in Prigi Bay, East Java, Indonesia


Citation

Purwanti, Pudji and Susilo, Edi and Fattah, Mochammad and Saputra, Jumadil and Qurrata, Vika Annisa (2022) The sustainability of small-scale fishing households in the pandemic era in Prigi Bay, East Java, Indonesia. Journal of Sustainability Science and Management (Malaysia), 17 (8). pp. 214-231. ISSN 2672-7226

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has changed the livelihoods of fishing communities socially and economically. This study examines the sustainability of small-scale fishing households in Prigi Bay during the COVID-19 pandemic based on the sustainable livelihoods approach (SLA). The objectives of this research are: (1) To identify small-scale fishing households’ access to human resource capital, natural resources, financial capital, physical capital and institutional social capital during the pandemic, (2) To examine the sustainability of small-scale fishing households’ livelihoods during the pandemic based on the five dimensions and (3) To determine the priority scale of the five capitals. This study is a quantitative research utilising the multidimensional scaling household economic analysis to determine the sustainability status of the five constituent capitals and strengthen the sustainability of small-scale fishing households. It was found that fishing households before and during the COVID-19 pandemic show insufficient sustainability (47.62%). Social capital is the SLA capital that changed the most among the five during the COVID-19 pandemic and has become entirely sustainable.


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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has changed the livelihoods of fishing communities socially and economically. This study examines the sustainability of small-scale fishing households in Prigi Bay during the COVID-19 pandemic based on the sustainable livelihoods approach (SLA). The objectives of this research are: (1) To identify small-scale fishing households’ access to human resource capital, natural resources, financial capital, physical capital and institutional social capital during the pandemic, (2) To examine the sustainability of small-scale fishing households’ livelihoods during the pandemic based on the five dimensions and (3) To determine the priority scale of the five capitals. This study is a quantitative research utilising the multidimensional scaling household economic analysis to determine the sustainability status of the five constituent capitals and strengthen the sustainability of small-scale fishing households. It was found that fishing households before and during the COVID-19 pandemic show insufficient sustainability (47.62%). Social capital is the SLA capital that changed the most among the five during the COVID-19 pandemic and has become entirely sustainable.

Additional Metadata

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Item Type: Article
AGROVOC Term: fisheries
AGROVOC Term: pandemics
AGROVOC Term: household expenditure
AGROVOC Term: sampling
AGROVOC Term: data collection
AGROVOC Term: scientists
AGROVOC Term: fishers
AGROVOC Term: sustainable development
AGROVOC Term: economic aspects
Geographical Term: Indonesia
Depositing User: Nor Hasnita Abdul Samat
Date Deposited: 19 Feb 2025 08:01
Last Modified: 19 Feb 2025 08:01
URI: http://webagris.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/416

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