“Lies build trust”: Social capital, masculinity, and community-based resource management in a Mexican fishery
Abstract
© 2019 Elsevier Ltd This paper relates how fishermen in San Evaristo on Mexico's Baja
peninsula employ fabrications to strengthen bonds of trust and navigate the complexities
of common pool resource extraction. We argue this trickery complicates notions of
social capital in community-based natural resource management, which emphasize communitarianism
in the form of trust. Trust, defined as a mutual dependability often rooted in honesty,
reliable information, or shared expectations, has long been recognized as essential
to common pool resource management. Despite this, research that takes a critical approach
to social capital places attention on the activities that foster social networks and
their norms by arguing that social capital is a process. A critical approach illuminates
San Evaristeño practices of lying and joking across social settings and contextualizes
these practices within cultural values of harmony. As San Evaristeños assert somewhat
paradoxically, for them “lies build trust.” Importantly, a critical approach to this
case study forces consideration of gender, an overlooked topic in social capital research.
San Evaristeña women are excluded from the verbal jousting through which men maintain
ties supporting their primacy in fishery management. Both men's joke-telling and San
Evaristeños’ aversion to conflict have implications for conservation outcomes. As
a result, we use these findings to help explain local resistance to outsiders and
external management strategies including land trusts, fishing cooperatives, and marine
protected areas.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Social SciencesDevelopment Studies
Economics
Business & Economics
Community-based natural resource management
Small-scale fisheries
Social capital
Common pool resources
Feminist political ecology
Latin America
BAJA-CALIFORNIA-SUR
GULF-OF-CALIFORNIA
BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
GENDER
GOVERNANCE
LESSONS
ENVIRONMENT
POVERTY
SUSTAINABILITY
INSTITUTIONS
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20607Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1016/j.worlddev.2019.05.031Publication Info
Siegelman, B; Haenn, N; & Basurto, X (2019). “Lies build trust”: Social capital, masculinity, and community-based resource management
in a Mexican fishery. World Development, 123. pp. 104601-104601. 10.1016/j.worlddev.2019.05.031. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20607.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Xavier Basurto
Truman and Nellie Semans/Alex Brown & Sons Associate Professor
I am interested in the fundamental question of how groups (human and non-human) can
find ways to self-organize, cooperate, and engage in successful collective action
for the benefit of the common good. To do this I strive to understand how the institutions
(formal and informal rules and norms) that govern social behavior, interplay with
biophysical variables to shape social-ecological systems. What kind of institutions
are better able to govern complex-adaptive systems? and how can societies (la

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