St. Malo
After completing his theological studies, he was assigned to Saint-Malo in 1929 where he observed the destitution of the fishermen and their families. He conducted in-depth surveys among the fishermen, regarding their problems and needs, in an effort to find solutions. For ten years he studied connections between unemployment, low wages, the poorly organized local fishing industry and the attempt on the part of international firms to monopolize the best fishing areas. Lebret determined that the vulnerability of the small scale local fishermen to the broader market had ingrained structural causes. He conducted over 400 studies on fishing conditions from areas as diverse as Britain, the Baltic and the Mediterranean. At the same time, he established trade unions, co-ops, and maritime associations to re-configure the way business was done. During
World War II, he was drafted to protect French fishing and oversee merchant marine policy. In 1941, he founded in Marseille, with
François Perroux,
Henri Desroche and others
Économie et Humanisme (Economy and
Humanism), in the Lyons region, whose objective was to study economic systems and social change, proposing to “put back the economy at the service of man”. In 1942, the
Revue Economie et Humanisme was created. ==Third World==