FAO, Food and Agricultural Organisation and WF, WorldFish and DU, Duke University (2024) Applying the illuminating hidden harvests approach – Compiling data on the contributions of small-scale fisheries to sustainable development. Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO), Duke University, WorldFish (WF), Rome, Italy. ISBN 978-92-5-138438-1
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This document has been adapted from the research protocol used to compile country case study data and to produce the results summarized in the 2023 report titled Illuminating Hidden Harvests: The contributions of small-scale fisheries to sustainable development (hereafter, IHH study) (FAO, Duke University & WorldFish, 2023). It has also been designed in conjunction with the e-learning course titled Collecting secondary data on small-scale fisheries, and aims to support practitioners and researchers around the world in compiling national and subnational data and assess the contributions and impacts of small-scale fisheries of interest to sustainable development. These contributions of small-scale fisheries are categorized according to the environmental, economic and social (including gender equality and nutrition and food security) dimensions of sustainable development, as well as the governance of small-scale fisheries. The approach to compile IHH data was developed in a way that: (i) is adaptable to each country’s context and data availability; and (ii) is comprehensive yet straightforward and cost-effective. While originally designed to be conducted at the national level, this approach can and should be modified as desired to fit different scales of study, and to respond to the particular needs and priorities of individual researchers’ regions of interest. As the name implies, the approach was designed to compile existing data on small-scale fisheries, and not to collect it. Rather, this approach only reinforces the importance of collecting more detailed data specific to small-scale fisheries (for example, as distinct from large-scale fisheries, aquaculture and recreational fisheries), in order to help fill the knowledge gap on small-scale fisheries’ contributions to sustainable development. Given the vast diversity of small-scale fisheries in different countries, a standard definition of “small-scale fisheries” is not prescribed here, nor in the IHH study; researchers should refer to the definitions used in each country context. However, to better characterize fisheries and the differences among them that often contribute to local definitions of small or large-scale fisheries, the IHH study and this approach used a fisheries activity characterization matrix. This tool provides a characterization of the small-scale fisheries subsector at the country level and allows researchers to assess the “scale” of small-scale fishing activities in a more relational manner, thus avoiding the imposition of fixed definitions.
Item Type: | Books |
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Keywords: | Harvests, Small-scale Fisheries, Sustainable Development, Case Studies, Fisheries Governance, Gender Equality, Nutrition, Food Security, FAO |
Subjects: | SSF Guidelines |
Depositing User: | Kokila ICSF Krish |
Date Deposited: | 05 Nov 2024 04:54 |
Last Modified: | 05 Nov 2024 04:54 |
URI: | http://icsfarchives.net/id/eprint/20690 |
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