Climate change, gender and aquatic food systems: call for action to address gender and social inequalities matters in the nexus
The uneven distribution of the adverse impacts of climate change on aquatic food systems is not only being felt between countries, but also within them. Particularly hard-hit are people who already experience intersecting power inequalities due to gender, socioeconomic class, age, location, ethnicit...
| Main Authors: | , , , , |
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| Format: | Ponencia |
| Language: | Inglés |
| Published: |
WorldFish
2022
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127512 |
| _version_ | 1855542288679174144 |
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| author | Adam, Rahma Amani, Anamika Kuijpers, Rob Smits, Esther Kruijssen, Froukje |
| author_browse | Adam, Rahma Amani, Anamika Kruijssen, Froukje Kuijpers, Rob Smits, Esther |
| author_facet | Adam, Rahma Amani, Anamika Kuijpers, Rob Smits, Esther Kruijssen, Froukje |
| author_sort | Adam, Rahma |
| collection | Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace) |
| description | The uneven distribution of the adverse impacts of climate change on aquatic food systems is not only being felt between countries, but also within them. Particularly hard-hit are people who already experience intersecting power inequalities due to gender, socioeconomic class, age, location, ethnicity, ability, religion and caste. Among poor and marginalized groups, women are especially vulnerable to climate change due to their over-dependence on natural resources. They have limited coping and adaptive capacity owing to their multiple, competing responsibilities, further exacerbated by power inequalities.
Therefore, research on the resilience of aquatic food systems to climate change must take gender and
intersectional dimensions into account. Quantitative and qualitative research must transcend the household level and gender-binary (men-women) focus to explore adaptation strategies of actors in small-scale fisheries
and aquaculture chains. In addition, to address entrenched power inequalities at formal, informal, local and
systemic levels, it is imperative that there be more collaboration across research, interventions and policies on climate adaptation and mitigation, and on aquatic food systems. A collaborative agenda premised on the diversity inherent in small-scale fisheries and aquaculture has the potential to build resilient, equitable, efficient and effective aquatic food systems. |
| format | Ponencia |
| id | CGSpace127512 |
| institution | CGIAR Consortium |
| language | Inglés |
| publishDate | 2022 |
| publishDateRange | 2022 |
| publishDateSort | 2022 |
| publisher | WorldFish |
| publisherStr | WorldFish |
| record_format | dspace |
| spelling | CGSpace1275122025-08-15T09:36:36Z Climate change, gender and aquatic food systems: call for action to address gender and social inequalities matters in the nexus Adam, Rahma Amani, Anamika Kuijpers, Rob Smits, Esther Kruijssen, Froukje climate change gender equality goal 1 no poverty aquatic foods goal 2 zero hunger goal 14 life below water goal 13 climate action fish gender equality, youth and social inclusion The uneven distribution of the adverse impacts of climate change on aquatic food systems is not only being felt between countries, but also within them. Particularly hard-hit are people who already experience intersecting power inequalities due to gender, socioeconomic class, age, location, ethnicity, ability, religion and caste. Among poor and marginalized groups, women are especially vulnerable to climate change due to their over-dependence on natural resources. They have limited coping and adaptive capacity owing to their multiple, competing responsibilities, further exacerbated by power inequalities. Therefore, research on the resilience of aquatic food systems to climate change must take gender and intersectional dimensions into account. Quantitative and qualitative research must transcend the household level and gender-binary (men-women) focus to explore adaptation strategies of actors in small-scale fisheries and aquaculture chains. In addition, to address entrenched power inequalities at formal, informal, local and systemic levels, it is imperative that there be more collaboration across research, interventions and policies on climate adaptation and mitigation, and on aquatic food systems. A collaborative agenda premised on the diversity inherent in small-scale fisheries and aquaculture has the potential to build resilient, equitable, efficient and effective aquatic food systems. 2022-04-14 2023-01-19T09:21:10Z 2023-01-19T09:21:10Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127512 en Open Access application/pdf WorldFish Rahma Adam, Anamika Amani, Rob Kuijpers, Esther Smits, Froukje Kruijssen. (14/4/2022). Climate change, gender and aquatic food systems: call for action to address gender and social inequalities matters in the nexus. Bayan Lepas, Malaysia: WorldFish (WorldFish). |
| spellingShingle | climate change gender equality goal 1 no poverty aquatic foods goal 2 zero hunger goal 14 life below water goal 13 climate action fish gender equality, youth and social inclusion Adam, Rahma Amani, Anamika Kuijpers, Rob Smits, Esther Kruijssen, Froukje Climate change, gender and aquatic food systems: call for action to address gender and social inequalities matters in the nexus |
| title | Climate change, gender and aquatic food systems: call for action to address gender and social inequalities matters in the nexus |
| title_full | Climate change, gender and aquatic food systems: call for action to address gender and social inequalities matters in the nexus |
| title_fullStr | Climate change, gender and aquatic food systems: call for action to address gender and social inequalities matters in the nexus |
| title_full_unstemmed | Climate change, gender and aquatic food systems: call for action to address gender and social inequalities matters in the nexus |
| title_short | Climate change, gender and aquatic food systems: call for action to address gender and social inequalities matters in the nexus |
| title_sort | climate change gender and aquatic food systems call for action to address gender and social inequalities matters in the nexus |
| topic | climate change gender equality goal 1 no poverty aquatic foods goal 2 zero hunger goal 14 life below water goal 13 climate action fish gender equality, youth and social inclusion |
| url | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127512 |
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