This position paper explores the false promises of industrial aquaculture, highlights the key sustainability issues of promoting farming of carnivorous fish species, such as salmon, underscores the environmental and social impacts throughout the whole value chain and explains why the EU should stop promoting seafood coming from industrial aquaculture and instead focus on promoting sustainable small-scale and low impact fisheries and aquaculture.
Why the current African Union’s blue economy strategy threatens small-scale fisheries
Issues for local artisanal communities in a potential future EU-Guinea SFPA
Women marching on!
Is Blue Growth compatible with securing small scale fisheries ?
Government transparency for ocean governance: Why the human rights based approach should be prioritised, not fighting IUU fishing
For small-scale fisheries organisations it is important that the international push for transparency is not dominated by anti-IUU campaigns. Poor information sharing between governments and small-scale fisheries affects a much wider set of issues relating to tenure rights and ensuring fair and sustainable access to fish.
Rights and wrongs: the South African case of fishing rights allocation
Masifundise explain the new policy in South Africa for securing community rights to fisheries, which they describe as promoting human rights and the well being of small-scale fisheries in ways that will undo the harms of the previous 'rights based approach', based on individual transferable quotas. The new policy for small-scale fisheries is however yet to be fully implemented.