@phdthesis{fdi:010093158, title = {{T}rac(k)ing fishe(r)s in the south {P}acific : surveillances in and of a more-than-human ocean}, author = {{K}on {K}am {K}ing, {J}.}, editor = {}, language = {{ENG}}, abstract = {{T}his research examines the politics and practices of tuna fisheries surveillance in the {S}outh {P}acific region in relation to the territorialisation of the oceans. {T}he thesis provides a socio-historical analysis of surveillance and territory-making modalities in offshore spaces, characterised as vast, distant, hardly accessible, labile and more-than-human environments. {A}t the crossroads of environmental humanities, science and technology studies and surveillance studies, this work revisits notions of surveillance and territory from an oceanic stance. {I}t draws on a qualitative and multi-sited investigation combining archive analysis, interviews and observations relating to {F}iji and {N}ew {C}aledonia's tuna fishing industries and their surveillance and management at the territorial, national and regional levels. {T}his research understands surveillance as a set of data-collecting and calculative practices to manage uncertainties. {T}his definition comprehends the surveillance of both the social and natural dimensions of fisheries and various forms of surveillance concerned with marine ecosystem study, natural resource management, biodiversity conservation, market development or maritime security. {T}he thesis first retraces the establishment, from the 1950s, of some main tuna fisheries surveillance apparatuses: the collection of fishers' logsheets, onboard fisheries observer programmes, tuna tagging programmes and maritime patrols. {I}t then examines the main infrastructures underlying surveillance, starting with those that condition physical and cognitive access to offshore worlds, i.e. the fishing, oceanographic and military vessels. {I}t analyses the associated practices of collecting, processing and circulating surveillance information that permits and constrains offshore surveillance. {T}he thesis shows the pivotal influence of surveillance as an instrument of territorialisation at sea. {I}t describes offshore environmental surveillance as opportunistic, distributed, and partly delegated to surveillance subjects. {O}ffshore surveillance hinges on pre-existing infrastructures and assembles multipotent boundary apparatuses that support plural and sometimes antagonistic scientific, regulatory, protective, coercive and commercial purposes. {T}hese apparatuses are shared and dependent on the involvement of actors subjected to multiple binds and variously interested and invested in the oceans and their surveillance. {T}his fluid approach consists of a pragmatic strategy to make the surveillance of elusive offshore worlds possible by rationalising limited surveillance capacities and circumventing infrastructures' rigidity. {H}owever, it simultaneously induces friction, which refracts territorialisation processes when these are projected over offshore spaces and produces specific lock-ins and forms of ignorance and inaction. {T}his study contributes to contemporary research on humans-oceans relations, territorialisation processes, surveillance and informational governance with a reflection on infrastructure governance.}, keywords = {{PACIFIQUE} ; {FIDJI} ; {NOUVELLE} {CALEDONIE} ; {OCEANIE}}, address = {{M}ontpellier ({FRA}) ; {B}r{\^e}me}, publisher = {{U}niversit{\'e} {P}aul {V}al{\'e}ry {M}ontpellier {III} ; {U}niversit{\'e} de {B}r{\^e}me}, pages = {581 multigr.}, year = {2024}, URL = {https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010093158}, }