STEP Seafood Trade, Ecosystems and People Preliminary Report: An analysis of small-scale fisheries value chains, market structure and effects of this on benefit flows and distribution in the Western Visayas
- 1. Stockholm Resilience Centre
- 2. Stockholm Resilience Centre & The Global Economic Dynamics and the Biosphere programme,
- 3. University of the Philippines Visayas
- 4. University of Connecticut
Description
Small-scale fishery governance has often taken a narrowly approach to sustainability, focusing either
on managing fishing activities, or market-based interventions and overlooking the embeddedness of
fishers within a broader social structure. This project uses a value chain approach to address these
gaps. The aim is to improve our understanding of the interplay between fisheries governance and
market dynamics, and the effects of this on benefit flows and distribution of marine ecosystem
services. This report contains preliminary results and examines the social dynamics among fishers
and traders that may impact benefit flows and ultimately resource extraction decisions.
The data presented in this report form part of a larger project also aiming to uncover the role of
seafood markets and market actors, like traders, in mediating interactions between the social and
ecological components in local Small-Scale Fisheries systems.
* SSF here include both municipal and commercial fisheries
Files
STEP prelim report Philippines 25th October 2017.pdf
Files
(6.3 MB)
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