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  • 1
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    The International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF) | Chennai, India
    In:  icsf@icsf.net | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/27104 | 25 | 2021-02-14 02:44:50 | 27104 | International Collective in Support of Fishworkers
    Publication Date: 2021-07-24
    Description: The latest issue of the women-in-fisheries newsletter of the International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF), Yemaya No.61, dated August 2020, features articles and interviews from Brazil, Costa Rica, France, India, Indonesia, Mexico and Senegal. The lead article is on small-scale fisheries and food security and the issue also carries a photo essay on the practice of Aratu fishing in the mangrove forests of Brazil.The Costa Rica article, by Maria Suarez Toro, looks at how the harsh economic impact of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic-related lockdown has spurred fisherwomen to return to their traditional sources of livelihood. Emmanuelle Yhuel -Bertin looks at the impact of the Covid-19 lockdown on small-scale fishing in Lorient, France, and how it is vividly captured in the pages of a diary maintained by a gillnetter skipper’s spouse. The article has been translated from French by Daniele Le Sann.The article from Indonesia, by Dedi Adhuri, points out how incomes from both harvest and post-harvest activities have dried up, leaving fishers in the lurch, adding to the anxieties of women who must make arrangements to survive from one day to the next.Inés López-Ercilla, Jorge Torre, Neyra Solano, and Francisco Fernández, in their article on Mexico, argue that, as in other countries, the experience of sheltering at home has led to increased domestic violence against women. Women in the small-scale fishing sector in Mexico are key drivers ensuring food security and community wellbeing during the Covid-19 pandemic.Ria Fitriana and Maria Kurupat, in their article on Indonesia, looks at how the changing land-use patterns threatens the livelihood of female crab collectors in Merauke, Papua, Indonesia.The article by Julie Lalluet-Geffroy,translated from French by Gildas, portraits a resolute mussel farmer, Amélie Dennebouy, who has challenged gender stereotypes to become a successful mussel entrepreneur in Pénestin, France.Nicole Franz, in her article, provides a brief overview of relevant international legal instruments and processes on small-scale fisheries contributions to rights to food and nutrition security, with a focus on the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).In Assane Deme’s interview (transcript prepared by Beatrice Gorez and translated from French to English by Gildas) with Mme Diaba Diop, general secretary of Pencum, Senegal, she points out that it is imperative that States extend all possible support to fishing communities, particularly to women and other vulnerable sections, in order to mitigate the dual challenge of growing food insecurity amidst the spread of Covid-19. There is a need for rehabilitating the processing sites, she added. Women would require field training to master new techniques.Beatriz Mesquita,Lorena Franca and Luciecia Cristina Moraiss da Silva, in their interview with Sandra Gomes, President of the Association of Indigenous Communities of the Middle Negro River ( ACIMRN), speaks about the challenge indigenous communities are facing due to Covid-19.Vishakha Gpta, in the Yemaya Recommends section, poins out that the film, Seguridad Alimentaria (Food Security) shows how activities such as fishing and clam gathering are experiences through which the community connects and continues to pass on their heritage.In the Profile column, Nasser Kasozi writes about how the work of Lovin Kobusiye is an example of new entrepreneurship emerging in pan-African fisheries and aquaculture.In the Whats New Webby? section, Manas Roshan writes about how ICSF’s new website, https://covid.icsf.net presents information on specific sectoral issues affected by Covid-19 and also disseminates new information as signs of recovery from the pandemic.In the Milestones section, Ahana Lakshmi speaks about how the new book, "The Sustainable Development Goals Report 2020", indicates that women now have better access to decision-making positions at the local level, mainly through legislated quotas.This issue of the Yemaya also carries the ever-popular cartoon strip, Yemaya Mama ('A fishy deal’).The current issue can be accessed at:https://www.icsf.net/en/yemaya/article/EN/61.html?limitstart=0
    Keywords: Environment ; Fisheries ; Brazil ; Costa Rica ; France ; India ; Indonesia ; Mexico ; Senegal ; women in fisheries ; Yemaya ; ICSF ; COVID-19 ; gender ; impact ; livelihoods ; fishing communities ; small scale fisheries ; fisheries ; Indigenous Communities ; Food security ; aquaculture ; Africa ; The Sustainable Development Goals Report 2020
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    The International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF) | Chennai, India
    In:  icsf@icsf.net | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/27105 | 25 | 2021-02-14 02:32:05 | 27105 | International Collective in Support of Fishworkers
    Publication Date: 2021-07-24
    Description: This issue was designed as a special edition to complement ICSF's campaign celebrating the contributions of small-scale fisheries to nutrition and food security within a human-rights-based framework. As the SAMUDRA Comment notes, the COVID-19 pandemic reminds us of the connection between food, health systems, sustainable development and human rights, and offers an opportunity to build back and build forward better.The articles in this edition of SAMUDRA Report – from 10 countries in Africa, Asia, South America and Oceania – reflect on the pandemic's impacts on fisheries, and situates the components of food security in the lives and livelihoods of SSF in several countries.The individual articles are as follows:Indonesia: COVID-19 lockdown measures have struck small-scale fishersUnited States: COVID-19 relief measures have favoured industrial operatorsBrazil: COVID-19 threatens the lives and livelihoods of vulnerable indigenous communities in the AmazonMalawi: Fish is an unrecognized element of trade in the Southern African Development Community (SADC)Ghana: A study explored how access to affordable small fish will reduce hunger and improve nutritionIndonesia: The unique flavours of the East Java cuisine come from the traditional fish processing technique of pindangTimor-Leste: The island nation is closing the gender gap while also providing food securityIndia: Managed sensibly, inland water bodies can provide the country with sustainable food securityIndia: The use of fishmeal to grow shrimp is exporting the precious nutrition that India’s children deserveAnalysis: A roadmap is needed for the role of fish in the right to food and nutritionNigeria: More than COVID-19 itself, the lockdowns have hit the country's unorganized small-scale fishers harderPacific Islands: The push for 30 percent MPAs must not bypass the democratic route used by small island nations to improve fisheries and incomesAnalysis: The 1960 UN Conference on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) failed to reach agreement, with India, Chile and Ecuador playing decisive rolesSSF / Blue Economy: There is no reason to wait for consensus on what is justice before acting on injustice in small-scale fisheriesReview: An award-winning film captures the complexities of small-scale fishers and fish processors in West Africa
    Keywords: Environment ; Fisheries ; Sociology ; Samudra Report ; ICSF ; COVID-19 ; lockdown ; Indonesia ; Nigeria ; US ; Brazil ; Indigenous communities ; Amazon ; gender ; Timor-LEste ; Ghana ; Nutrition ; small-scale fisheries ; UNCLOS ; Malawi ; Southern African Development Communities (SADC) ; India ; Pacific Islands ; West Africa ; Fishing communities ; food security ; sustainable management ; income ; small islands ; conservation
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    International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF) | Chennai, India
    In:  icsf@icsf.net | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/27027 | 25 | 2020-08-11 09:48:19 | 27027 | International Collective in Support of Fishworkers
    Publication Date: 2021-07-24
    Description: Yemaya No. 59, dated June 2019, features articles from Fiji and India and an article on the 7th Global conference on gender in aquaculture and fisheries(GAF7), as well as an article on the recently-held roundtable in India on organising women by five groups engaged in organising women. The editorial comment calls for urgent need to look at levels of exclusion women are facing, despite the attention received at the international level. The article on Fiji shows the lack of sex disaggregated data available for any meaningful analysis. Nikita Gopal, in her article on GAF7, highlights the intersectionalities of power relations existing in the fisheries sector. The Roundtable highlighted the tremendous gains that women make when they collectively raise their voices in demand of their rights. The issue also celebrates the recent edition of Slow Fish held in Genoa, Italy. The Slow Fish Forum promotes small-scale fishing and responsible fish consumption and provides a unique space, particularly for women in the small-scale fisheries sector.
    Keywords: Aquaculture ; Conservation ; Environment ; Fisheries ; Management ; Sociology ; Yemaya ; India ; Women in fisheries ; ICSF ; small-scale fisheries ; GAF ; Fiji ; India ; fishing communities ; women ; gender ; WIF ; reports ; conferences
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    Type: monograph
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    Chennai, India
    In:  icsf@icsf.net | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/27028 | 25 | 2020-08-11 09:46:56 | 27028 | International Collective in Support of Fishworkers
    Publication Date: 2021-07-24
    Description: Yemaya No. 60, dated April 2020, features articles from India, Costa Rica, Japan, European Union, and a special supplement, Turning Points: A decade of change for women in fisheries. The article from India details the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on women fishworkers in Mumbai. The Costa Rican article shows how the women fishers, shrimp peelers and mollusc workers identify their priority areas for the recognition and formalization of work. The article from Japan looks at the challenge of excluding women from fishery cooperative associations. The article from Africa looks at the gradual transformation of the African Confederation of Artisanal Fishing Organization (CAOPA) from 2010 onwards. The article talks about how the organization made gender issues as a priority area in their advocacy work. The article on Southeast Asia narrates the story of how declining incomes and ageing villages mean that women are likely to be the mainstay of families and communities in the small-scale fisheries. The article on small-scale fisheries and the contribution of women highlights that part-time fishing and gleaning activities globally may contribute nearly 3 million tonnes of seafood, with a landed value of around US$5.6 bn. The article on AKTEA, The European Network of Women in Fisheries and Aquaculture, looks at what are the challenges and the way forward for the network.In her review of the recently published book, "Practical Guide for Gender Analysis in Small-scale Fisheries and Aquaculture in Southeast Asia", Susana Siar looks at how the book is designed to support the SSF Guidelines. The Yemaya Supplement, Turning Points: A decade of change for women in fisheries, focuses on a change that has happened over a decade: a truthful appreciation of women’s role in fisheries. Their involvement in the sector follows a similar arc the world over, despite wide differences in society, culture, politics and economics. This supplement is an effort to understand and identify the main factors affecting this over the decade -- the causes that have shaped their role, both positively and negatively. The Profile column looks at how a fishing village in India mourns the death of an Italian nurse, Lauretta Farina of Bergamo. The Milestones column features a recently published report of the WHO Global Health Workforce. The report calls for gender-transformative policies and measures to be put in place if global targets for better health and gender outcomes are to be followed.
    Keywords: Aquaculture ; Environment ; Fisheries ; Management ; Sociology ; ICSF ; Yemaya ; COVID-19 ; coronavirus ; fishery cooperatives ; impact fishing industry ; pandemic ; CAOPA ; AKTEA ; aquaculture ; Southeast Asia ; SSF guidelines ; climate change ; fish processing ; equality ; India ; Costa Rica ; Japan ; European Union ; supplement ; turning points: a decade of change for women in fisheries ; gender ; women ; fishing communities ; small-scale fisheries ; fisheries trade ; fisheries development
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    International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF) | Chennai, India
    In:  icsf@icsf.net | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/25389 | 25 | 2018-09-10 09:46:55 | 25389 | International Collective in Support of Fishworkers
    Publication Date: 2021-07-16
    Description: The opening editorial Comment in this issue argues that as the implementation of the Voluntary Guidelines for Securing Sustainable Small-Scale Fisheries in the Context of Food Security and Poverty Eradication (SSF Guidelines) gets under way, it is imperative to lobby for policies and processes that will empower small-scale fishing communities. How the Guaranis, indigenous people of Morro dos Cavalos in Brazil, are being displaced from their lands to satisfy the interests of politicians and businesses is analyzed in one article, while another details how the Seafood Slavery Risk Tool tracks abuses of labour and human rights in seafood supply chains. The current issue also features a report on the Danish Institute for Human Rights’ meeting on the contribution of human rights to the sustainable development of fisheries. Continuing on the theme of livelihood rights, the article from Indonesia delineates the causes for the poor nutritional intake in Indonesia's coastal communities. On-the-ground reports of two meetings – one on the largest conference on occupational safety and health in the fishing industry, held in Canada, and the other, on the 33rd Session of the FAO Committee on Fisheries (COFI) – provide insights into issues that plague the fisheries sector in different ways. Another article in SAMUDRA Report No. 79 explains how fishermen and scientists are being brought together to track wind and waves, and save lives, through new innovative weather forecasting technology. A report on the Pêcheurs du Monde film festival, held in Lorient, France, and which turns 10 this year, as well as a review of a book on the global implementation of the SSF Guidelines, swing the spotlight to the problems that small-scale fishing communities face around the world. SAMUDRA Report No. 79 also features the regular Roundup section that carries news snippets, analysis and tidbits on fisheries from around the world. SAMUDRA Report No. 79 can be accessed at https://www.icsf.net/en/samudra/article/EN/79.html?limitstart=0
    Keywords: Aquaculture ; Environment ; Fisheries ; Health ; Law ; Brazil ; indigenous rights ; aquaculture ; occupational safety ; occupational health ; Sri Lanka ; Co-operatives ; human rights ; slaverty ; seafood slaverty ; labour ; seafood industry ; ICSF ; Samudra Report ; India ; Tamil Nadu ; cyclone Ockhi ; Kerala ; IFISH5 ; SSF guidelines ; sustainable oceans ; coastal communities ; reclaiming rights ; COFI 2018 ; weather forecasting ; film festival ; Lorient
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    International Collective in Support of Fishworkers | Chennai, India
    In:  icsf@icsf.net | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/25288 | 25 | 2018-09-10 10:03:32 | 25288 | International Collective in Support of Fishworkers
    Publication Date: 2021-07-16
    Description: National Workshop on Small-scale Fisheries, Cyclone Ockhi and Disaster Risk Management was held on 28 to 29 May, 2018 at Thiruvananthapuram. The workshop was organised by the International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF) Trust with the support of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). The workshop was attended by a large number of distinguished participants, including fishworker organisations, government officials, academics, non-governmental organisations, civil society organisations and the disaster affected community. Representatives from FAO and the Bay of Bengal Programme Inter-Governmental Organisation (BOBP-IGO) also attended the programme. On 29 November 2017, a deep depression, detected in the Indian Ocean southwest of Sri Lanka, rapidly intensified into a cyclonic storm off the coast of Tamil Nadu and Kerala and the Union Territory of Lakshadweep Islands. Cyclone Ockhi, as it was named, took the life of a number of fishers, injured many and destroyed fishing vessels and gear.
    Keywords: Environment ; Fisheries ; Sociology ; ICSF ; Reports ; cyclone Ockhi ; disaster risk management ; FAO ; safety at sea ; death at sea ; fishing communities ; small scale fisheries ; India ; Kerala ; Tamil Nadu ; fishing villages ; livelihoods ; natural disasters ; IMD ; deep-sea fishing ; trawlers ; fishing vessels ; damage ; compensation ; SSF guidelines ; relief ; rehabilitation ; reconstruction ; recovery ; vulnerability ; poverty ; disaster preparedness ; fisheries management ; governments ; missing at sea ; fishermen ; Monsoon ; depression ; communication technology
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    International Collective in Support of Fishworkers | Chennai, India
    In:  icsf@icsf.net | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/25289 | 25 | 2018-09-10 09:59:21 | 25289 | International Collective in Support of Fishworkers
    Publication Date: 2021-07-16
    Description: Between 29 November and 3 December, 2017, Cyclone Ockhi devastated hundreds of lives and livelihoods of coastal fishing communities in Kerala and Tamil Nadu, India. This study assesses the impacts of the cyclone on fishing communities and the mechanisms in place at the local, national and international levels to address disaster risks and sea safety in small-scale fisheries, using a human rights-based approach. In line with the Sendai Framework 2015-2030 and the Voluntary Guidelines for Securing Sustainable Small-scale Fisheries, the study recommends applying “relief-development continuum” and “build back better” concepts to the management of disaster risks in order to save lives and to reduce damage to fisheries assets and livelihoods.
    Keywords: Environment ; Fisheries ; Sociology ; Cyclone Ockhi ; disaster risk management ; sea safety ; Indian ; marine fisheries ; ICSF ; cyclone forecasting ; dissemination of warnings ; disaster management authorities ; disaster risk management ; fishing vessels ; Kerala ; Tamil Nadu ; fishing villages ; fishermen ; missing at sea ; death at sea ; communication technology ; Kerala State Disaster Management Authority ; Tamil Nadu State Disaster Management Authority ; fishing communities ; case study ; post-Ockhi disaster risk reduction measures ; nearshore fishers ; deep- sea fishing ; Lakshaweep Islands ; Early Warning Dissemination Systems ; Community Based Disaster Management ; Monitoring ; Control and Surveillance ; Sri Lanka ; damage ; compensation ; SSF guidelines ; relief ; rehabilitation ; reconstruction ; recovery ; vulnerability ; poverty ; disaster preparedness ; livelihoods ; IMD ; missing at sea
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    The International Collective in Support of Fishworkers | Chennai, India
    In:  icsf@icsf.net | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/21603 | 25 | 2017-10-12 11:16:41 | 21603 | International Collective in Support of Fishworkers
    Publication Date: 2021-07-15
    Keywords: Aquaculture ; Environment ; Fisheries ; ICSF ; journal ; report ; samudra ; fishing communities ; aquaculture ; Brazil ; Peru ; New Zealand ; Ireland ; Ghana ; Tanzania ; West Africa ; Canada ; The Philippines ; Fiji ; ILO ; fishing convention ; labour ; migrants
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    International Collective in Support of Fishworkers | Chennai, India
    In:  icsf@icsf.net | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/21161 | 25 | 2017-03-16 10:24:44 | 21161 | International Collective in Support of Fishworkers
    Publication Date: 2021-07-14
    Keywords: Aquaculture ; Environment ; Fisheries ; ICSF ; journal ; Samudra report
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    International Collective in Support of Fishworkers | Chennai, India
    In:  icsf@icsf.net | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/21214 | 25 | 2017-06-06 07:01:04 | 21214 | International Collective in Support of Fishworkers
    Publication Date: 2021-07-14
    Keywords: Aquaculture ; Environment ; Fisheries ; ICSF ; journal ; report ; samudra ; fishing communities ; aquaculture ; Cadana ; Mexico ; India ; Kerala ; SDG ; Sustainable goal development ; ocean conference ; Japan ; tsunami ; chile ; small scale fisheries ; artisanal fisheries ; WTO ; Fisheries subsidies ; Fisheries development
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
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