The Barotse Floodplain fishery is an important source of livelihood for economically poor women and men in western Zambia. Current efforts by the Department of Fisheries and the traditional authority to manage the fishery can be characterized as weak. The use of unsustainable fishing practices and overfishing are pervasive. Drawing on resilience thinking, we examine the extent to which the existing fishery-dependent livelihood context represents a social-ecological trap, i.e., a process in which rigid and persistent behavioral responses are applied because of a lack of capacity to adapt, leading to overdependence on the fishery, and ultimately, unsustainable outcomes. We use a gender lens and look beyond the primary sector (fishing) to incl...
There is increasing awareness that integrating gender into development frameworks is critical for ef...
Working with fishing communities in Barotse and Lake Chilwa, and other partners, the project will an...
The Lake Kariba fishery is of regional importance; it accounts for 35% of the total Zambian fish pro...
The paper examines existing fishery-dependent livelihood contexts in terms of a “social-ecological t...
Few studies examine post-harvest fish losses using a gender lens or collect sex-disaggregated data. ...
This brief explains the gender transformative approach which was adopted throughout the project to a...
Agricultural interventions that aim at alleviating rural poverty have important gender implications....
Technical and social constraints limit value chain actors from equitably engaging in and benefiting ...
In Malawi, fish is a form of livelihood to many poor people, despite fluctuations in catches. Female...
The focus of this study is the livelihoods of men and women involved in fishery relatedactivities in...
Design of effective interventions that support fisherwomen’s livelihoods and fisheries sustainabili...
The demand for gender analysis is now increasingly orthodox in natural resource programming, includi...
This paper starts from the perspective on resource management approaches as based upon a body of env...
Almost a half million fishers in Bangladesh are predominantly reliant on the hilsa shad (Tenualosa i...
Women's access to natural resources for food and livelihoods is shaped by resource availability, inc...
There is increasing awareness that integrating gender into development frameworks is critical for ef...
Working with fishing communities in Barotse and Lake Chilwa, and other partners, the project will an...
The Lake Kariba fishery is of regional importance; it accounts for 35% of the total Zambian fish pro...
The paper examines existing fishery-dependent livelihood contexts in terms of a “social-ecological t...
Few studies examine post-harvest fish losses using a gender lens or collect sex-disaggregated data. ...
This brief explains the gender transformative approach which was adopted throughout the project to a...
Agricultural interventions that aim at alleviating rural poverty have important gender implications....
Technical and social constraints limit value chain actors from equitably engaging in and benefiting ...
In Malawi, fish is a form of livelihood to many poor people, despite fluctuations in catches. Female...
The focus of this study is the livelihoods of men and women involved in fishery relatedactivities in...
Design of effective interventions that support fisherwomen’s livelihoods and fisheries sustainabili...
The demand for gender analysis is now increasingly orthodox in natural resource programming, includi...
This paper starts from the perspective on resource management approaches as based upon a body of env...
Almost a half million fishers in Bangladesh are predominantly reliant on the hilsa shad (Tenualosa i...
Women's access to natural resources for food and livelihoods is shaped by resource availability, inc...
There is increasing awareness that integrating gender into development frameworks is critical for ef...
Working with fishing communities in Barotse and Lake Chilwa, and other partners, the project will an...
The Lake Kariba fishery is of regional importance; it accounts for 35% of the total Zambian fish pro...