Achieving Poverty Reduction Through Responsible Fisheries
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INTERPOL Study on Fisheries Crime in the West African Coastal Region
STUDY ON FISHERIES CRIME IN THE WEST AFRICAN COASTAL REGION September 2014 Acknowledgements The INTERPOL Environmental Security Sub-Directorate (ENS) gratefully received contributions for the contents of this study from authorities in the following member countries: . Benin . Cameroon . Cape Verde . Côte d’Ivoire . The Gambia . Ghana . Guinea . Guinea Bissau . Liberia . Mauritania . Nigeria . Senegal . Sierra Leone . Togo And experts from the following organizations: . Environmental Justice Foundation (EJF) . European Commission . Fisheries Committee for the West Central Gulf of Guinea (FCWC) . Hen Mpoano . International Monitoring, Control and Surveillance (MCS) Network . International Maritime Organization (IMO) . Maritime Trade Information Sharing Centre for the Gulf of Guinea (MTISC-GoG) . Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad) . Norwegian National Advisory Group Against Organized IUU-Fishing . The Pew Charitable Trusts . Stop Illegal Fishing . Sub-Regional Fisheries Commission (SRFC) . United States Agency for International Development / Collaborative Management for a Sustainable Fisheries Future (USAID / COMFISH) . United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) . World Customs Organization (WCO) . World Bank This study was made possible with the financial support of the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Cover photograph: Copyright INTERPOL. Acknowledgements Chapter: Chapter: 2 Table of Contents Acknowledgements ................................................................................................................................ -
Co-Management in Continental Fishing in Benin: the Case of Lake Nokoue
CO-MANAGEMENT IN CONTINENTAL FISHING IN BENIN: THE CASE OF LAKE NOKOUE CYRIAQUE ATTI – MAMA Hydraulic Department, Cotonou-Benin ABSTRACT Introduction This case study of co-management in Lake Nokoue in Benin comprises an introduction and 10 points based on the institutional analysis research framework. The introduction involves a brief historic recall of case studies, the reasons for the case study, and the methodology used. The 10 points which constitute the framework of the document are subdivided into three parts. The first part recalls the physical, biological and technical features of Lake Nokoue as well as socioeconomic and sociocultural context and fishing markets. The second part examines the institutional structures, organizational internal and external put in place for co-management, and the interactions between partners in a sociopolitical and natural environment in Benin. Finally, the last part measures the impact of the co-management system put in place in examining the efficiency, equity and durability of the system. The conclusion comes back to the prominent points of the study and indicates some identifiable tracks. Methodology The study was carried out in six successive and interdependent phases: the documentation, development and the test of the questionnaire, the sampling and the choice of the investigators and informants, field work, the computerized counting and release of results and finally the reporting. Data compilation was essentially carried out using two tools: semi-structured interviews with an upkeep guide and structured interviews with the use of questionnaires. Documentation The documentation is limited and centered on the subject of the study. It is especially based on the document presented and discussed in November 1998 during a workshop seminar in Maputo (Mozambique) and whose objective was to favor standardization and comparison of the results of the case studies. -
Theroles of Exploration and Exploitation in the Export Market
The Roles of Exploration and Exploitation in the Export Market Integration of Beninese Producers at the Base of the Pyramid Souléϊmane Adéyèmi Adékambi Thesis committee Promotor Prof. Dr J.C.M. van Trijp Professor of Marketing and Consumer Behaviour Wageningen University Co-promotor Dr P.T.M. Ingenbleek Associate professor, Marketing and Consumer Behaviour Group Wageningen University Other members Prof. Dr B. Guye, Gaston Berger University, Saint Louis, Senegal Prof. Dr M. Maertens, KU Leuven, Belgium Prof. Dr J.H. Trienekens, Wageningen University Prof. Dr A.H.J.B. Helmsing, Institute of Social Studies, The Hague, The Netherlands This research was conducted under the auspices of the Wageningen School of Social Sciences (WASS) The Roles of Exploration and Exploitation in the Export Market Integration of Beninese Producers at the Base of the Pyramid Souléϊmane Adéyèmi Adékambi Thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of doctor at Wageningen University by the authority of the Rector Magnificus Prof. Dr M.J. Kropff, in the presence of the Thesis Committee appointed by the Academic Board to be defended in public on Friday 27 February 2015 at 11 a.m. in the Aula. Souléϊmane Adéyèmi Adékambi The Roles of Exploration and Exploitation in the Export Market Integration of Beninese Producers at the Base of the Pyramid, 21 4 pages. PhD thesis, Wageningen University, Wageningen, NL (2015) With references, with summaries in English and Dutch ISBN: 978-94-6257-246-1 To Moussabihatou Raimy-Lokoun Fadilath Omontayo Acknowledgements This thesis marks the end of a long and fantastic five-year journey filled with challenges and enjoyment. -
Shrimp Quality and Safety Management Along the Supply Chain in Benin
Shrimp quality and safety management along the supply chain in Benin D. Sylvain Dabadé Thesis committee Promotors Prof. Dr M.H. Zwietering Professor of Food Microbiology Wageningen University Prof. Dr D.J. Hounhouigan Professor of Food Science and Technology University of Abomey-Calavi, Benin Co-promotor Dr H.M.W. den Besten Assistant professor, Laboratory of Food Microbiology Wageningen University Other members Prof. Dr J.A.J. Verreth, Wageningen University Prof. Dr P. Dalgaard, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark Prof. Dr F. van Knapen, Utrecht University Dr E. Franz, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Bilthoven This research was conducted under the auspices of the Graduate School VLAG (Advanced studies in Food Technology, Agrobiotechnology, Nutrition and Health Sciences) Shrimp quality and safety management along the supply chain in Benin D. Sylvain Dabadé Thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of doctor at Wageningen University by the authority of the Rector Magnificus Prof. Dr A.P.J. Mol, in the presence of the Thesis committee appointed by the Academic Board to be defended in public on Tuesday 25 August 2015 at 11 a.m. in the Aula. D. Sylvain Dabadé Shrimp quality and safety management along the supply chain in Benin, 158 pages. PhD thesis, Wageningen University, Wageningen, NL (2015) With references, with summary in English ISBN 978-94-6257-420-5 Contents Abstract 7 Chapter 1 Introduction and outline of the thesis 9 Chapter 2 Quality perceptions of stakeholders in Beninese -
Fisheries Catch Reconstructions: West Africa, Part II
ISSN 1198-6727 FISHERIES CATCH RECONSTRUCTIONS: WEST AFRICA, PART II Fisheries Centre Research Reports 2015 Volume 23 Number 3 ISSN 1198-6727 Fisheries Centre Research Reports 2015 VOLUME NUMBER FISHERIES CATCH RECONSTRUCTIONS: WEST AFRICA, PART II Fisheries Centre, University of British Columbia, Canada Edited by Dyhia Belhabib and Daniel Pauly Fisheries Centre Research Reports 23(3) 128 pages © published 2015 by The Fisheries Centre, University of British Columbia 2202 Main Mall Vancouver, B.C., Canada, V6T 1Z4 ISSN 1198-6727 Fisheries Centre Research Reports 23(3) 2015 Edited by Dyhia Belhabib and Daniel Pauly CONTENT Editors’ Preface i Fisheries in troubled waters: A catch reconstruction for Guinea-Bissau, 1950-2010 1 Dyhia Belhabib and Daniel Pauly Côte d’Ivoire: fisheries catch reconstruction, 1950-2010 17 Dyhia Belhabib and Daniel Pauly The marine fisheries of Togo, the ‘Heart of West Africa,’ 1950 to 2010 37 Dyhia Belhabib, Viviane Kutoub and Daniel Pauly Benin’s fisheries: a catch reconstruction, 1950-2010 51 Dyhia Belhabib and Daniel Pauly An overview of the Nigerian marine fisheries and a re-evaluation of their catch from 1950 to 2010 65 Lawrence Etim, Dyhia Belhabib and Daniel Pauly Reconstructing fisheries catches for Cameroon between 1950 and 2010 77 Dyhia Belhabib and Daniel Pauly Gabon fisheries between 1950 and 2010: a catch reconstruction 85 Dyhia Belhabib The implications of misreporting on catch trends: a catch reconstruction for the People’s Republic of the Congo, 1950-2010 95 Dyhia Belhabib and Daniel Pauly An attempt -
Report of the FAO/CECAF Working Group on the Assessment of Demersal Resources – Subgroup South Freetown, Sierra Leone, 9–18 October 2008
CECAF/ECAF SERIES 11/73 COPACE/PACE SÉRIES 11/73 Report of the FAO/CECAF Working Group on the Assessment of Demersal Resources – Subgroup South Freetown, Sierra Leone, 9–18 October 2008 Rapport du Groupe de travail FAO/COPACE sur l ´évaluation des ressources démersales – Sous-groupe Sud Freetown, Sierra Leone, 9-18 octobre 2008 PROGRAMME FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF FISHERIES IN CECAF/ECAF SERIES 11/73 THE EASTERN CENTRAL ATLANTIC COPACE/PACE SERIES 11/73 FISHERY COMMITTEE FOR THE EASTERN CENTRAL ATLANTIC PROGRAMME POUR LE DÉVELOPPEMENT DES PÊCHES DANS L’ATLANTIQUE CENTRE-EST COMITÉ DES PÊCHES POUR L’ATLANTIQUE CENTRE-EST Report of the FAO/CECAF Working Group on the Assessment of Demersal Resources – Subgroup South Freetown, Sierra Leone, 9–18 October 2008 Rapport du Groupe de travail FAO/COPACE sur l’évaluation des ressources démersales – Sous-groupe Sud Freetown, Sierra Leone, 9-18 octobre 2008 FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS ORGANISATION DES NATIONS UNIES POUR L’ALIMENTATION ET L’AGRICULTURE Rome, 2012 The designations employed and the presentation of material in this information product do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations concerning the legal or development status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Les appellations employées dans ce produit d’information et la présentation des données qui y figurent n’impliquent de la part de l’Organisation des Nations Unies pour l’alimentation et l’agriculture aucune prise de position quant au statut juridique ou au stade de développement des pays, territoires, villes ou zones ou de leurs autorités, ni quant au tracé de leurs frontières ou limites. -
Benin's Fisheries
Fisheries Centre The University of British Columbia Working Paper Series Working Paper #2015 - 03 Benin’s fisheries: A catch reconstruction, 1950-2010 Dyhia Belhabib and Daniel Pauly Year: 2015 Email: [email protected] This working paper is made available by the Fisheries Centre, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4, Canada. Benin - Belhabib and Pauly 1 BENIN’S FISHERIES: A CATCH RECONSTRUCTION, 1950-2010 Dyhia Belhabib and Daniel Pauly Sea Around Us, Fisheries Centre, University of British Columbia 2202 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4, Canada d.belhabib @fisheries.ubc.ca; d.pauly @fisheries.ubc.ca ABSTRACT Total marine fisheries catches from the Exclusive Economic Zone of Benin and its coastal lagoons were estimated between 1950 and 2010. The reconstruction considered artisanal and industrial sectors and their discards, subsistence fisheries from the marine and lagoon waters including those generated by women for the first time. Small-scale catch estimates were obtained using catch per unit of effort and per capita catch estimates alongside with the number of fishers and the number of pirogues, while industrial catches were estimated by country using the number of industrial vessels and their catch per unit of effort. Total catches were estimated at 4.0 million t between 1950 and 2010 of which 3.9 million t were domestic and mainly from lagoon areas compared to 1.7 million t of catch data supplied to the FAO. Catches showed a decreasing pattern in contrast to the increase observed in official data, which puts in jeopardy the livelihoods of the many fishers relying solely on fisheries. -
Climate Change Impact and Adaptation: Lagoonal Fishing Communities in West Africa
Climate Change Impact and Adaptation: Lagoonal Fishing Communities in West Africa K. Sian Davies-Vollum, Debadayita Raha, and Daniel Koomson Contents Introduction ....................................................................................... 2 Lagoon Environments and Communities ........................................................ 3 Lagoon Environments ......................................................................... 3 Lagoon Communities ......................................................................... 5 Impacts of Climate Change on Lagoons and Lagoon Communities .... ........................ 6 Sea Level Rise ................................................................................ 6 Flood Risk ..................................................................................... 7 Rainfall and Temperature ..................................................................... 7 Vulnerability of and Adaptation to Climate Change in Lagoon Fishing Communities ......... 8 Community-Level Autonomous Adaptations .................................................... 9 Understanding Vulnerability for Effective Adaptation Planning: Muni Lagoon Case Study ... 13 Policy Implementation and Participatory Governance ........................................... 15 International Policies and Frameworks Influencing Coastal Governance and Policy ....... 16 Regional Frameworks and Governance ...................................................... 17 National-Level Coastal and Climate Change Policy Mechanisms .......................... -
Cesifo Working Paper No. 5243 Category 9: Resource and Environment Economics March 2015
A Service of Leibniz-Informationszentrum econstor Wirtschaft Leibniz Information Centre Make Your Publications Visible. zbw for Economics Alonso, Elena Briones; Houssa, Romain; Verpoorten, Marijke Working Paper Voodoo versus Fishing Committees: The Role of Traditional and Contemporary Institutions in Fischeries Management CESifo Working Paper, No. 5243 Provided in Cooperation with: Ifo Institute – Leibniz Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich Suggested Citation: Alonso, Elena Briones; Houssa, Romain; Verpoorten, Marijke (2015) : Voodoo versus Fishing Committees: The Role of Traditional and Contemporary Institutions in Fischeries Management, CESifo Working Paper, No. 5243, Center for Economic Studies and ifo Institute (CESifo), Munich This Version is available at: http://hdl.handle.net/10419/108795 Standard-Nutzungsbedingungen: Terms of use: Die Dokumente auf EconStor dürfen zu eigenen wissenschaftlichen Documents in EconStor may be saved and copied for your Zwecken und zum Privatgebrauch gespeichert und kopiert werden. personal and scholarly purposes. Sie dürfen die Dokumente nicht für öffentliche oder kommerzielle You are not to copy documents for public or commercial Zwecke vervielfältigen, öffentlich ausstellen, öffentlich zugänglich purposes, to exhibit the documents publicly, to make them machen, vertreiben oder anderweitig nutzen. publicly available on the internet, or to distribute or otherwise use the documents in public. Sofern die Verfasser die Dokumente unter Open-Content-Lizenzen (insbesondere CC-Lizenzen) -
2018 Issn: 2456-8643 Pressures on the Fishing
International Journal of Agriculture, Environment and Bioresearch Vol. 3, No. 06; 2018 ISSN: 2456-8643 PRESSURES ON THE FISHING POTENTIAL OF SOUTH BENIN'S WATER BODIES: POLLUTION AND UNSUSTAINABLE FISHERIES Christian A. H. ADJE Fisheries and Oceans Research Institute of Benin (IRHOB / CBRSI / MESRS) Moussa GIBIGAYE, Laboratory of Rural Geography and Agricultural Expertise (LaGREA) Placid CLEDJO Pierre PAGNEY Laboratory, Climate, Water, Ecosystem and Development (LACEEDE) Brice A. H. TENTE Laboratory of Biogeography and Environmental Expertise (LABEE) ABSTRACT In the Benin context where the fishing potential of marine and continental waters has reached its maximum exploitation level, the present work proposes to contribute to the establishment of a sustainable management through the diagnosis of the evils which undermine the fishing Benign. To achieve this, several techniques and tools for data collection and analysis were used. The documentary review and the analysis of a series of fishery data made it possible to know the current situation of the country's fish production. An inventory, characterized by an annual non- growing fishery production, stagnated around 40,000 tons from 1997 to today. At the same time, Benin's demand for fish has continued to increase, as evidenced by the total import of fish from 20,000 tonnes to 160,000 tonnes a year between 1995 and 2015. Surveys carried out along the Beninese coast and on some continental water bodies in southern Benin (Sô and Ouémé) have revealed malfunctions in fishing and in its management by fishing. administration. These dysfunctions have for name, the massive use of gear and practices of fishing-unsustainable and the absence of a follow-up of the application of the regulations of the fishing activities in the Republic of Benin Keywords: Halieutic potential; fishing practices-unsustainable; fisheries 1. -
Influencing Policies and Practice for Improved Food and Nutrition Security
Influencing policies and practice for improved food and nutrition security Research outcomes for policy formulation and implementation Article in the Outcomes Synthesis Series of the NWO-WOTRO Food & Business Research programme, July 2020 By Dr Ellen Lammers and Daniëlle de Winter 1 The Food & Business Research programme Food & Business Research aims at addressing persistent food and nutrition security challenges in low and middle income countries. It focuses on the urgent and growing need for adequate knowledge and solutions for regional and local problems related to food security. Food & Business Research has supported 75 research projects under two funding instruments: the Food & Business Global Challenges Programme (GCP) and the Food & Business Applied Research Fund (ARF). Both are part of the Food & Business Knowledge Agenda of the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA). The objective of GCP is to promote research-based advanced understanding of emerging key issues in global and regional food security and their impact on local food security and the role of private sector development. The objective of ARF is to promote research-supported innovations that contribute to food security and private sector development in the partner countries of Dutch development cooperation. Food & Business Research is funded jointly by the MoFA and NWO-WOTRO and is managed by NWO-WOTRO. Research for Impact NWO-WOTRO Science for Global Development aims to support researchers in increasing the societal and policy impact of their research projects. NWO defines societal impact of research as ‘the contribution that innovative research makes to understand and solve global issues, with a focus on sustainable development and poverty reduction’.1 NWO-WOTRO developed its ‘Research for Impact’ approach2 starting from the realisation that research insights and innovations do not automatically lead to changes in society. -
FCWC Regional Fisheries Management Plan
CONTENTS CONTENTS LIST OF ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS........................................................................................................5 SUMMARY OF THE PLAN........................................................................................................................................... 6 I. Descriptive situation of fisheries in the FCWC cooperation zone............................................................ 8 I.1 Evaluation and description of the main fisheries resources exploited in FCWC member countries.................................................................................................................................. 8 I.1.1 Coastal pelagic resources.......................................................................................................................... 8 I.1.2 Offshore pelagic resources (tunas).......................................................................................................10 I.1.3 Coastal demersal resources....................................................................................................................10 I.1.4 Deep demersal resources........................................................................................................................ 11 I.2 Evaluation and description of the main fisheries....................................................................................11 I.2.1 The coastal pelagic fishery....................................................................................................................