Governing the fisher body – safety as body-politics and fisheries governance
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11409Date
2017-07-12Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Body Mass Index (BMI) is not only the prevailing tool used for defining and diagnosing
obesity, but it is also a tool that intervenes into fisheries governance, and into fishers’
lives and bodies. All fishers on board vessels over 100 gross tons (GT) must hold a
seaman’s licence; too high a BMI may lead to a “loss-of-licence” and the inability to
undertake their occupation. From a governmentality perspective, this paper discusses
the use of the seaman’s licence and explores how BMI may be an instrument in
fisheries governance. We examine how safety policies link to storylines around
health and obesity to produce healthy and safe fishers, and how this in turn links
to the overall objective of governmentality: to produce productive labourers (fishers).
We explore the multiple materialities of the BMI by looking at Norwegian fisheries’
safety policies from a Foucauldian perspective and question the wider implications
of a safety policy focused on BMI and obesity.