Gender, retirement & mobility: a case study of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program in Newfoundland

This thesis explores issues of retirement, restructuring, gender and mobility through an analysis of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program (LERP) as it impacted lobster harvesters on the South Coast of Newfoundland (LFA 11). Employing the tools of Institutional Ethnography (Smith, 2005), this an...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bury, Madeline
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/13859/
https://research.library.mun.ca/13859/1/thesis.pdf
id ftmemorialuniv:oai:research.library.mun.ca:13859
record_format openpolar
spelling ftmemorialuniv:oai:research.library.mun.ca:13859 2023-10-01T03:57:32+02:00 Gender, retirement & mobility: a case study of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program in Newfoundland Bury, Madeline 2019-05 application/pdf https://research.library.mun.ca/13859/ https://research.library.mun.ca/13859/1/thesis.pdf en eng Memorial University of Newfoundland https://research.library.mun.ca/13859/1/thesis.pdf Bury, Madeline <https://research.library.mun.ca/view/creator_az/Bury=3AMadeline=3A=3A.html> (2019) Gender, retirement & mobility: a case study of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program in Newfoundland. Masters thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland. thesis_license Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftmemorialuniv 2023-09-03T06:49:29Z This thesis explores issues of retirement, restructuring, gender and mobility through an analysis of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program (LERP) as it impacted lobster harvesters on the South Coast of Newfoundland (LFA 11). Employing the tools of Institutional Ethnography (Smith, 2005), this analysis begins in the work and daily lives of harvesters who retired through the LERP and explores the institutional networks and chains of action which transform their lived experience into institutionally manageable outcomes. I conclude, based on interview data from harvesters and key informants as well an analysis of program documents, that the LERP perpetuates historical advantage and disadvantage within the fishery. I explore the specific mechanisms of the program which simultaneously acknowledge and then make invisible the work of women and crew, in effect precluding their access to benefits of the program. I explore the implications of this structured inequality in terms of unpaid labour, negotiations of a retirement decision within couples, life in retirement, and the ability to find land-based work in rural Newfoundland subsequent to leaving the fishery. This project is supervised by Dr. Nicole Power and Dr. Charles Mather and is funded by the On The Move Partnership. Thesis Newfoundland Memorial University of Newfoundland: Research Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Memorial University of Newfoundland: Research Repository
op_collection_id ftmemorialuniv
language English
description This thesis explores issues of retirement, restructuring, gender and mobility through an analysis of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program (LERP) as it impacted lobster harvesters on the South Coast of Newfoundland (LFA 11). Employing the tools of Institutional Ethnography (Smith, 2005), this analysis begins in the work and daily lives of harvesters who retired through the LERP and explores the institutional networks and chains of action which transform their lived experience into institutionally manageable outcomes. I conclude, based on interview data from harvesters and key informants as well an analysis of program documents, that the LERP perpetuates historical advantage and disadvantage within the fishery. I explore the specific mechanisms of the program which simultaneously acknowledge and then make invisible the work of women and crew, in effect precluding their access to benefits of the program. I explore the implications of this structured inequality in terms of unpaid labour, negotiations of a retirement decision within couples, life in retirement, and the ability to find land-based work in rural Newfoundland subsequent to leaving the fishery. This project is supervised by Dr. Nicole Power and Dr. Charles Mather and is funded by the On The Move Partnership.
format Thesis
author Bury, Madeline
spellingShingle Bury, Madeline
Gender, retirement & mobility: a case study of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program in Newfoundland
author_facet Bury, Madeline
author_sort Bury, Madeline
title Gender, retirement & mobility: a case study of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program in Newfoundland
title_short Gender, retirement & mobility: a case study of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program in Newfoundland
title_full Gender, retirement & mobility: a case study of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program in Newfoundland
title_fullStr Gender, retirement & mobility: a case study of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program in Newfoundland
title_full_unstemmed Gender, retirement & mobility: a case study of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program in Newfoundland
title_sort gender, retirement & mobility: a case study of the lobster enterprise retirement program in newfoundland
publisher Memorial University of Newfoundland
publishDate 2019
url https://research.library.mun.ca/13859/
https://research.library.mun.ca/13859/1/thesis.pdf
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation https://research.library.mun.ca/13859/1/thesis.pdf
Bury, Madeline <https://research.library.mun.ca/view/creator_az/Bury=3AMadeline=3A=3A.html> (2019) Gender, retirement & mobility: a case study of the Lobster Enterprise Retirement Program in Newfoundland. Masters thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland.
op_rights thesis_license
_version_ 1778528983330062336