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Fishing rights and colonial government: institutional development in the Bengal Presidency

Shourya Sen and Richard Adelstein

Cambridge Journal of Economics, 2021, vol. 45, issue 2, 313-331

Abstract: We examine the evolution of fishing rights in colonial Bengal through a series of cases heard at the Calcutta High Court in the 1880s and culminating in the passage of legislation in 1889. We posit an implicit relational contract between the colonizing British and the landowning class in colonial Bengal as a way to understand the concurrent evolution of fishing rights and institutions of governance in the region. The system of incentives created by this contract determined the development of fishing rights at a crucial moment in the history of colonial Bengal and, more broadly, became a primary mechanism of institutional change in the region. The analysis also shows the High Court to have acted, albeit in vain, as a truly independent judiciary; had its resolution of the cases prevailed, the institutional development of the region might have been substantially different than it was.

Keywords: Fishing rights; State formation; Colonialism; Relational contracts; Incentives; Credible commitments (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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