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MeetingMeeting document
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MeetingMeeting documentQuatrième réunion des Parties à l’Accord de la FAO de 2009 relatif aux mesures du ressort de l’État du port visant à prévenir, contrecarrer et éliminer la pêche illicite, non déclarée et non réglementée. 8-12 mai 2023. Bali (Indonésie).
RAPPORT DE LA TROISIÈME RÉUNION DES PARTIES À L’ACCORD RELATIF AUX MESURES DU RESSORT DE L’ÉTAT DU PORT VISANT À PRÉVENIR, CONTRECARRER ET ÉLIMINER LA PECHE ILLICITE, NON DÉCLARÉE ET NON RÉGLEMENTÉE
2023
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Book (stand-alone)Technical reportReport of the FAO Working Group on the Assessment of Small Pelagic Fish off Northwest Africa. Nouadhibou, Mauritania, 22–27 May 2017. Rapport du Groupe de travail de la FAO sur l’évaluation des petits pélagiques au large de l’Afrique nord-occidentale. Nouadhibou, Mauritanie, 22-27 mai 2017. 2018
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No results found.The seventeenth meeting of the FAO Working Group on the Assessment of Small Pelagic Fish off Northwest Africa was held in Nouadhibou, Mauritania, 22–27 May 2017. The Group assessed the status of the small pelagic resources in Northwest Africa and made projections on the development of the status of the stocks and on future effort and catch levels. Total catch of the main small pelagic fish in the subregion increased from around 2.4 million tonnes in 2015, to 2.7 million tonnes in 2016, constituting a 13 percent increase as compared to 2015. Total catch of small pelagic fish for the period 1990–2016 has been fluctuating with an average of around 1.9 millions tonnes while the average for the last five years has been 2.6 million tonnes. La dix-septième réunion du Groupe de travail de la FAO sur l'évaluation des petits pélagiques au large de l'Afrique du Nord-Ouest s’est tenue à Nouadhibou, en Mauritanie, du 22 au 27 mai 2017. Le Groupe de travail a examiné l’état actuel des ressources de petits pélagiques en Afrique nord-occidentale et a fait des projections sur le développement de l’état des stocks ainsi que sur les futurs niveaux d’effort et de captures. Les captures totales observées des principales espèces de petits poissons pélagiques dans la sous-région ont enregistrées une augmentation en passant d´environ 2,4 millions de tonnes capturées en 2015 pour environ 2,7 millions de tonnes en 2016 (13 pour cent par rapport à 2015). Les captures totales de petits pélagiques pour la période 1990-2016 ont fluctué avec une moyenne de près de 1,9 million de tonnes alors que la moyenne pour les cinq dernières années a été de 2,6 millions de tonnes. -
Policy briefPolicy briefCOVID-19, land, natural resources, gender issues and Indigenous Peoples' rights in Asia 2022
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No results found.Secure tenure rights and meaningful participation in the management of land, territories and natural resources are a key element for the food security of Indigenous Peoples, who often rely on agriculture for their livelihoods. Indigenous Peoples have a strong cultural, spiritual, social and economic connection with their land, which is closely linked to their identity and existence itself. Land and natural resources tenure security is also at the core of human rights’ enjoyment among Indigenous Peoples. Their right to food, shelter and an adequate standard of living – just to name a few – are closely linked to secure tenure rights. Furthermore, Indigenous Peoples play a critical role ensuring sustainable development and biodiversity conservation, and their land tenure security is closely associated with that. Before the pandemic, forced evictions and conflicts over their land, territories and resources were already driving Indigenous Peoples into poverty and vulnerability. The COVID-19 crisis has led to reports of encroachment upon indigenous land, creating hardship during an especially difficult time and placing Indigenous Peoples in a precarious situation. In this context, this brief asks specifically what impact COVID-19 is having on Indigenous Peoples’ rights, especially women, elaborating on how challenges could be overcome leaving no one behind. -
Book (series)Technical studyGuidelines for the Routine Collection of Capture Fishery Data. Prepared at the FAO /DANIDA expert consultation Bangkok, Thailand, 18-30 May 1998 1999These guidelines aim to help those who design routine data collection programmes, focusing on the relationship between typical questions asked by policy-makers and managers, and the data required for providing reliable answers. Fisheries policy and management objectives, particularly under the precautionary approach, need to be based upon analyses of reliable data. Data are needed to make rational decisions, evaluate the fisheries performance in relation to management activities and fulfil regio nal requirements. These objectives are achieved using fishery performance indicators. Indicators are used to measure the state of the resource, the performance of fishing controls, economic efficiency, socio-economic performance and social continuity. The primary factor in choosing what data to collect is the link between the necessary operational, biological, economic and socio-cultural indicators and their associated variables. The way in which different data variables are collected needs to b e tailored to the structure of the fishery. The strategy will be strongly influenced by the budget and personnel available, and the degree to which fishers and others co-operate. The programme must identify which variables should be collected through complete enumeration and which can be sampled. Collection methods are influenced by the variable itself, the strategy, collection point and the skill of the enumerator. Once collected, fishery data must be stored securely, but made easily available for analysis, which is achieved through a computer-based data management system, following the basic data processing principles. The implementation of a data collection programme should follow a normal project cycle, developing a new legal and institutional framework as appropriate.