Drivers of Small-Scale Fishers’ Willingness to Adopt Property Rights Co-Management in the Lake Nokoué and Porto-Novo Lagoon Complex in Southeast Benin
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Abstract
The estuarian and lagoon areas of southeast Benin are atypical lake territories where private
property rights are hereditary from endogenous legal tradition. People live in stilt dwellings and
are exclusively dedicated to free-to-access fishing. Consequently, an increasing number of fishers
with low respect for the State’s general rules for sustainable fishing contribute to legal pluralism and
the tragedy of the commons. Co-management of small-scale fisheries has been advocated to offer
various benefits, including improved socio-ecological integration, shared sustainable livelihoods,
and adherence to biodiversity objectives. This study aims to assess the factors that influence the
willingness of small-scale fishers to adopt property rights co-management options in southeast Benin.
The data were collected using the discrete choice experiment method. The results show that 44% of
fishers are willing to adopt property rights co-management options. This willingness is determined by
their involvement in the co-management committee, access to a subsidy and livelihood diversification
options. These fishers are the oldest in the sample and primarily owners of Acadja, a traditional
fishing tool made of bush and tree branches planted in the lake. Institutional agreements for comanagement
establishment, such as subsidies to support small-scale fishers’
