Book Cover
E-book
Author Chen, Henry T., author.

Title Taiwanese distant-water fisheries in Southeast Asia, 1936-1977 / Henry T. Chen
Published St. John's, Newfoundland : International Maritime Economic History Association, 2009

Copies

Description 1 online resource
Series Research in maritime history, 1188-3928 ; no. 39
Research in maritime history ; no. 39.
Contents Japan and the development of Taiwan's fishing industry -- The revival of the fishing industry in postwar Taiwan -- Kaohsiung fishing port and its fishing ancillary industries -- The Taiwanese fishing industry and the military-political complex -- The Kaohsiung fishing industry and its ancillary industries -- The development of Kaohsiung's fishing companies -- Daily lives at sea, fishing zones and politics -- The culture and daily life of the Kaohsiung fishing communities -- The 1970s crisis in the Taiwanese fishing industry -- Conclusion -- Appendix 1: list of informants
Summary This study provides a detailed study of the fishing nation of Taiwan at a regional and local level in order to address the lack of academic research into the Taiwanese fishing industry in comparison to other nations. Over three stages of analysis it identifies the reasons for the rise and decline of Taiwanese distant-water fisheries. The first stage examines the broader historical background, government policy, and birth of the Taiwanese fishing industry. The second explores the industry at a national level, analysing the relationships between fishing, government, military, and ancillary industries. The third approach narrows the scope to individual fishing communities and explores the working lives and cultural habits of the fishermen. The major focus is the port of Kaohsiung and how it became the major supply base for the fishing industry. It explores Taiwan's relationship with Japan and the postwar decline due to Japan's losses in the Second World War. Finally, it considers the development of Taiwanese colonial and postwar fishing policies. It concludes that modern fishing techniques were introduced from Japan, and emboldened Taiwanese fisherman to risk entering remote and foreign waters. The author suggests that further research into Taiwan take would help scholars better understand the history of distant-fisheries. The journal consists of nine chapters, an introduction and conclusion, a list of interviewees, and a bibliography of English and Chinese-language sources
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed January 23, 2018)
Subject Fisheries -- Taiwan -- History
Fisheries -- Southeast Asia -- History
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Commerce.
Fisheries
Southeast Asia
Taiwan
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author International Maritime Economic History Association.
ISBN 9781786948946
178694894X