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Sociocultural Aspects of Small-Scale Fisheries Development in West Africa

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Document (.pdf, .doc)
971
Published: 
Tuesday, January 1, 1974
U.S. Agency for International Development
The focus of this paper is on the role of social and cultural variables in the development of the small-scale fishery in West Africa. The small-scale marine fisheries of West Africa province approximately 70% of the total marine production of West Africa, ranging from a low of about 30% in Ivory Coast to 99% in Guinea. Practically all of the small-scale fisherman's catch is consumed locally, thus providing an important, high quality protein input to a population where the overall per-capita consumption of fish is about twice as much as that for red meat. Further, the small-scale fishery provides employment for about one-quarter of a million fishermen not including the many women and men involved in processing distribution, retailing of the catch.
Theme(s) & Sub-theme(s): 
Aquaculture
Resource type: 
Topical Report
Resource Scale: 
Regional

Related resources

Sociocultural Issues in West African Fisheries Development
The Economics and Management of Thai Marine Fisheries
Contribuciones Para El Estudio De La Pesca Artesanal En America Latina: Proceedings of The Mini-Symposium on Small-Scale Fisheries of The 46Th International Congress of Americanists, 4-8 Jul 1988
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