Academic literature on the topic 'Fishing – Malawi'

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Journal articles on the topic "Fishing – Malawi"

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Ferguson, Anne E., Bill Derman, and Richard M. Mkandawire. "The new development rhetoric and Lake Malawi." Africa 63, no. 1 (January 1993): 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1161295.

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AbstractDespite the new development rhetoric emphasising sustainability, preservationof biodiversity, natural resource management, income generation and participatory research, the new World Bank Malawi Fisheries Development Project represents a continuation of past practices. This article examines the underlying conceptual framework and implications of this World Bank project in the light of research among fishing communities on Lake Malawi. The Bank, it is argued, is mistakenly promoting assistance to the large-scale commercial fishing sector rather than attempting to implement more innovative and collaborative project initiatives with small-scale fishers, processors and traders who comprise the vast majority of lake users.
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Holm, Rochelle H., Tikhala Chakalamba, Bwighane Ngasama, and Fanuel Kapute. "Geographic and occupational mobility of small-scale fishers of Lake Malawi: an exploratory study of water, sanitation, and hygiene access, Malawi." Water Policy 23, no. 4 (June 18, 2021): 897–911. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wp.2021.058.

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Abstract The livelihood of small-scale fishers on the world's freshwater lakes cuts across the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 6, which covers water and sanitation, and SDG 8 on economic growth. The aim of this study was to examine the nature and extent of fishers' mobility patterns and access to improved sanitation facilities, safe drinking water, and handwashing practices while at work and home for two fishing camps in Malawi. The study used key informant interviews, questionnaires, water quality testing, and an observational checklist, followed by interviews on fishers' occupational migration. Many fishers (85%; 51/60) live and work in fishing camps with their families. Most fishers only went on day trips, but 8% of their working days were away from the fishing camps. Only eight fishers had safe (0 cfu/100 ml) drinking water at home. Most fishers reported drinking (97%) from and going to the toilet (92%) in the lake during fishing. Historical trends in cholera cases did not correlate with higher periods of migratory behavior of fishers observed in this study. Improving the livelihoods of small-scale fishers requires attention to their culture, the economics of the industry, and geographic criteria while at work and within fishing communities along the shores of Lake Malawi.
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McCracken, John. "Fishing and the Colonial Economy: the Case of Malawi." Journal of African History 28, no. 3 (November 1987): 413–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021853700030115.

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Despite the evident importance of fishing in Malawi, its role in the territorial colonial economy has been largely ignored. This paper focuses on the evolution of fishing and fish-trading at the south end of Lake Nyasa (Lake Malawi), emphasising the interaction between ecological change and changes in market opportunity. During the late nineteenth century, fishing played an important role in the economy of the Mang'anja people alongside agricultural production. Communual tasks such as the setting of nets or building of canoes were conducted by male members of an mbumba or matrilineage group who traded fish with the agriculturally productive highland regions nearby in exchange for maize and beans. Little changed initially with the estalishment of colonial rule, though some labour previously employed in fishing may have been diverted into cotton-growing which the Government encouraged in the Upper Shire Valley. The establishment of military camps during the First World War, combined with the sudden drying up of Lake Chilwa, the major source of fish in the Shire Highlands, created the opportunity for enterprising fishermen to start a regular trade in dried fish to Blantyre and Zomba from about 1917. This was stimulated in the 1920s by the steady rise of water levels on the Shire River which brought cotton production virtually to a halt making fishing an attractive alternative.The advent in the 1930s of non-African commercial fishermen who used lorries to transport fresh fish to Blantyre and dried fish to Salisbury did not prevent a further expansion of African fishing and fish-trading, many of the traders using bicycles to extend their sales into the southern Malawian hinterland. Officials tended to side with African fishermen when their interests clashed with those of incomers, notably the Greek Yiannakis brothers. But they had little success in introducing new techniques to improve productivity and fell back in the 1950s On the prohibition of exports to the Rhodesias, a policy aimed at ensuring a regular supply of fish to workers on European estates within Malawi.By the 1950s, European companies were recorded as being responsible for over half the fish caught in Malawi. African fishing had been affected by the emergence of a small group of capitalist entrepreneurs, most of them former labour migrants, who had invested their savings in imported nets and boats and employed labour on a regular basis. Mang'anja fishermen now faced competition from Tonga migrants using new technical and organisational methods. In contrast to under-development sterotypes, the indigenous industry continued to expand, with migrant workers playing an important role in the development of fishing.
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Nagoli, Joseph, Lucy Binauli, and Asafu Chijere. "Inclusive Ecosystems? Women’s Participation in the Aquatic Ecosystem of Lake Malawi." Environments 6, no. 1 (December 28, 2018): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/environments6010003.

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Ecosystem services and their role in alleviating poverty are centered on a set of gendered social relations. The understanding of these relations between men and women in aquatic ecosystems can unveil gender-based opportunities and constraints along the value chains of the ecosystem services. A gender discourse perspective on participation of actors of an ecosystem can further facilitate the understanding of the complex and subtle ways in which gender is represented, constructed, and contested. This paper analyses the barriers to the participation of women in the fishing industry. The analysis is based on a study conducted in five fishing villages of Lake Malawi through a structured questionnaire, focus group discussions, key informant interviews, and observations. First, it looks at gender and participation from a theoretical perspective to explain how gender manifests itself in participation and interrogates why women have limited benefits from the fishing industry. Second, it highlights the barriers that seem to preclude women from participating, which include institutional embedded norms, financial, socio-cultural, and reproduction roles. In general, women had little influence on the type of fishing sites, markets, and access to financing of their businesses. A gender transformative agenda is therefore required to proactively facilitate changes of some entrenched institutional norms as well as having greater access to financial services and new technologies in order to enhance women’s full participation and equal benefits from ecosystem services.
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Nagoli, Joseph, Katrien Holvoet, and Michelle Remme. "HIV and AIDS vulnerability in fishing communities in Mangochi district, Malawi." African Journal of AIDS Research 9, no. 1 (April 2010): 71–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/16085906.2010.484575.

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CHIRWA, W. C. "FISHING RIGHTS, ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION ALONG SOUTHERN LAKE MALAWI, 1920-1964." African Affairs 95, no. 380 (July 1, 1996): 351–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.afraf.a007738.

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Kalumbi, Limbani R., Chisomo Thaulo, Eleanor E. MacPherson, and Tracy Morse. "Perspectives and Practices on Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene from a Fishing Community along Lake Malombe, Southern Malawi." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 18 (September 15, 2020): 6703. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17186703.

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People living in fishing communities have a high burden of preventable water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) related diseases but have often been neglected in research and policy. We explored practices and perspectives on WASH among fishing villages around Lake Malombe, Malawi. We employed a mixed methods design, and data were initially collected through participant observations (five weeks), followed by a second phase of qualitative interviews (n = 16), focus group discussions (n = 7), and quantitative surveys (n = 242). We observed that safe water sources were scarce; latrines were basic; and handwashing facilities were limited. Seventy-one percent (n = 174) of households collected water from unsafe sources (open wells and the lake). Eighty-six percent (n = 207) of households had basic short-term latrines. Twenty-four percent (n = 59) of households had handwashing facilities with soap. Qualitative data supported these observations and identified additional factors which compounded poor WASH practices including, a high transient population associated with the fishing trade, poor infrastructure design and construction which lacked consideration of the environmental factors, context and social and cultural norms. As such, fishing communities are underserved and marginalised with constrained access to WASH services, which must be addressed through behaviour-centered and context appropriate solutions.
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Chavula, Geoffrey, Harlod Sungani, and Kenneth Gondwe. "Mapping Potential Fishing Grounds in Lake Malawi Using AVHRR and MODIS Satellite Imagery." International Journal of Geosciences 03, no. 03 (2012): 650–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ijg.2012.33065.

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Derman, Bill, and Anne Ferguson. "Human rights, environment, and development: The dispossession of fishing communities on Lake Malawi." Human Ecology 23, no. 2 (June 1995): 125–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf01191646.

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Hara, Mafaniso, and Friday Njaya. "Migratory fishing in Malawi and its challenges for beach-based rights co-management." African Identities 19, no. 3 (July 3, 2021): 400–417. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14725843.2021.1937047.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Fishing – Malawi"

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MacPherson, Eleanor. "Understanding gender power relations, transactional sex and HIV in fishing communities in Southern Malawi." Thesis, University of Liverpool, 2014. http://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/2006663/.

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Over the past 30 years, HIV/AIDS has had a devastating impact on the lives of millions of people around the world. Despite successes in the roll out of HIV treatment programmes, HIV prevention programmes have been less successful in lowering incidence rates. Certain groups have been found to experience significantly higher prevalence than seen in the general population, with fishing communities representing one key group with significantly higher risk of HIV infection. In fishing communities, gender power relations and economic vulnerability intersect in ways that mean that individuals are particularly vulnerable to HIV infection. In the past decade, there has increasingly been a focus on structural drivers of HIV transmission such as gender power relations. Gender differences are fundamentally underpinned by power inequalities in society and can result in the subordination of women and their interests in a manner that favours men. This thesis set out to understand how gendered structural drivers shaped vulnerability to HIV in fishing communities, and to develop interventions to address these structural drivers. The research was conducted in two fishing communities in the rural district of Mangochi in Southern Malawi. The design of the study drew on social relations theory and second-wave feminism. The research methodology used qualitative and participatory methods to address four key research objectives: (1) to understand gender power relations in fishing communities in Southern Malawi; (2) to explore and document the key drivers and facilitators of participation in transactional sex in the study villages; (3) to document individual and community perceptions of HIV risk and transactional sex in the study villages; (4) to develop a HIV prevention strategy to address risk of HIV/AIDS among fishing communities in southern Lake Malawi. Key findings are that in fishing communities, transactional sex was common and took a variety of forms, ranging from gift-giving within relationships, to-sex-for fish exchanges, to sex worker encounters. Power differences between couples in transactional sexual encounters shaped individuals’ abilities to negotiate condom use. The context and motivations for transactional sex varied and were mediated by economic need and social position both of men and women. Microfinance is a tool that can alleviate poverty and potentially prevent HIV. However, in the fishing context microfinance loan repayment procedures often increased female fish traders’ vulnerability to HIV. Participants had a good understanding of HIV risk yet this did not result in the adoption of risk-reduction strategies. Building on these findings, the thesis presents suggested HIV interventions that were developed through participatory community workshops. Interventions identified included: working with men and boys to support transformation of gender roles and normative behaviour; enforcing legislation to improve the ecological environment to reduce the impact of decline fish stocks and environmental hazards on risk-taking behaviour; improving access to HIV testing and treatment services; and improving living and working conditions of men and women working in the fishing industry. In conclusion, this thesis demonstrates the urgent need to introduce structural interventions in fishing communities in Southern Malawi and provides clear recommendations for implementing potential interventions.
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Haraldsdottir, Gudrun. "Cooperation and conflicting interests an ethnography of fishing and fish trading on the shores of Lake Malawi /." online access from Digital Dissertation Consortium access full-text, 2002. http://libweb.cityu.edu.hk/cgi-bin/er/db/ddcdiss.pl?3050803.

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Kumchedwa, Brighton Kalembeni. "Artisanal fishery in socio-economic development of rural communities in Malawi : a case study of enclave villages of Lake Malawi National Park." Thesis, 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/10413/6307.

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Fishing, and artisanal fishing in particular, plays a key role in the provision of rural employment and more importantly, household food security in the developing nations. The importance of artisanal fishery is shown in Malawi where artisanal fishery produces between 85-95% of the total fish production, and about 70% of the animal protein in human consumption comes from fish. About 43,000 people are employed directly in artisanal fisheries and approximately 100,000150,000 are indirectly employed within the artisanal fishery. Owing to increasing human population in the developing countries coupled with the common property, open-access nature of the fish resource, the resource has not been able to cope with the ever-increasing socio-economic demand placed on it. The resource is so degraded that it is has started to decline beyond capacity to sustain itself. This study was an attempt to examine and understand the artisanal fishery as it contributes to the socio-economic well being of the rural population particularly, the enclave communities of Lake Malawi National Park. The present study used structured interviews, focus group interviews, key informant interviews and personal observation to collect socio-economic information of the fishery. These research tools revealed that among the enclave communities income levels are low and unsustainable due to declining productivity of fishing. The decline may be a result of increasing human population, weak community-based institutions, limited agriculture, poor infrastructure with regard to processing and marketing of fish, limited supplementary and alternatives economic activities, and the fishing methods. Documentary information was used to contextualize artisanal fishery, to examine and understand the common-property and open-access nature of the fish resource as it relates to the exploitation Of fish among the enclave communities. Integrated development that brings together conservation and socio-economic development is the only option that will increase the income of the enclave communities to sustainable levels and achieve the Park's conservation objectives. The socio-economic intervention options should include provision of basic social facilities such as education, health, safe water etc, increase the economic power of the enclave communities through irrigation, adding more value to the fishery, engaging in aquarium trade, community-based eco-tourism and beekeeping. These options would lead to socio-economic sustainability among the enclave communities and would bring about the conservation objectives of the Park.
Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1998.
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Yakobe, Andrew U. "Fishing hub :establishing a sustainable fishing infrastructure as a catalyst for socio-economic development on Lake Malawi." Thesis, 2001. https://hdl.handle.net/10539/30393.

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This document is submitted in partial fulfilment for the degree: Master of Architecture (Professional) at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2020. School of Architecture & Planning, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Overfishing, habitat degradation, climate change and poor fish preservation infrastructure are the main factors that are leading to the depletion of fish species in Lake Malawi. Lake Malawi is of great significance because it is a World Heritage Site due its biodiversity, notably its various fish species. According to The Guardian Development Network (2018) “fish stocks in the Lake Malawi have dwindled by 90% over the past 20 years.” This is alarming because fishing is one of the main ways of sustaining human existence across Lake Malawi and extending into the inland settlements where fishing is a source of food, income, and recreation It is the author’s observation that the Department of Fisheries in Malawi together with various other institutions are struggling to resolve fish depletion and its negative impacts on impoverished lakeshore settlers’ livelihoods because of lack of adequate fishing infrastructure suitable for such sensitive regions that promote sustainable fishing practices around fishing villages. The absence of such facilities further threatens the extinction of the popular Chambo fish (Tilapia) which accounts for 1% of fish consumed from Lake Malawi (Malawi Government Economic Report, 2017). This research investigates and proposes a Fishing Hub which is a fish conservation facility centered on Chambo fish, which also addresses social, economic and ecological aspects that are at the core of fish depletion. It further explores the notion of regional and nature inspired design by interrogating the natural environment and existing built fabric along and around the lakeshore to produce a hybrid architectural language of balance; that is suitable to Lake Malawi as a response to building in sensitive ecosystems. The Fishing Hub is a sustainable ecosystem of water and land synergy that allows for fish reproduction and consumption whilst achieving socio-economic development on the lakeshore, at Nguwo fish landing site. The intervention formalizes the existing unregulated fish markets without taking away the agency of the locals, improve post-harvest infrastructure, aids to control water pollution, and most of promotes sustainable industrial fishing that also integrates collective small scale business networks of the community. This transformed space becomes a beacon of educative sustainable fishing practices that also gives an opportunity for tourists to experience the lakeshore culture. Inevitably this will become a harmonized ecosystem and a catalyst for socio-economic development on Lake Malawi.
PH2021
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Yakobe, Andrew U. "Fishing hub: establishing a sustainable fishing infrastructure as a catalyst for socio-economic development on Lake Malawi." Thesis, 2020. https://hdl.handle.net/10539/30393.

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This document is submitted in partial fulfilment for the degree: Master of Architecture (Professional) at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2020. School of Architecture & Planning, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Overfishing, habitat degradation, climate change and poor fish preservation infrastructure are the main factors that are leading to the depletion of fish species in Lake Malawi. Lake Malawi is of great significance because it is a World Heritage Site due its biodiversity, notably its various fish species. According to The Guardian Development Network (2018) “fish stocks in the Lake Malawi have dwindled by 90% over the past 20 years.” This is alarming because fishing is one of the main ways of sustaining human existence across Lake Malawi and extending into the inland settlements where fishing is a source of food, income, and recreation It is the author’s observation that the Department of Fisheries in Malawi together with various other institutions are struggling to resolve fish depletion and its negative impacts on impoverished lakeshore settlers’ livelihoods because of lack of adequate fishing infrastructure suitable for such sensitive regions that promote sustainable fishing practices around fishing villages. The absence of such facilities further threatens the extinction of the popular Chambo fish (Tilapia) which accounts for 1% of fish consumed from Lake Malawi (Malawi Government Economic Report, 2017). This research investigates and proposes a Fishing Hub which is a fish conservation facility centered on Chambo fish, which also addresses social, economic and ecological aspects that are at the core of fish depletion. It further explores the notion of regional and nature inspired design by interrogating the natural environment and existing built fabric along and around the lakeshore to produce a hybrid architectural language of balance; that is suitable to Lake Malawi as a response to building in sensitive ecosystems. The Fishing Hub is a sustainable ecosystem of water and land synergy that allows for fish reproduction and consumption whilst achieving socio-economic development on the lakeshore, at Nguwo fish landing site. The intervention formalizes the existing unregulated fish markets without taking away the agency of the locals, improve post-harvest infrastructure, aids to control water pollution, and most of promotes sustainable industrial fishing that also integrates collective small scale business networks of the community. This transformed space becomes a beacon of educative sustainable fishing practices that also gives an opportunity for tourists to experience the lakeshore culture. Inevitably this will become a harmonized ecosystem and a catalyst for socio-economic development on Lake Malawi.
PH2021
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Books on the topic "Fishing – Malawi"

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Pedroso, Jared. Boom!: Orihinal na isinulat ni Jared Pedroso sa wikang Hiligaynon. Iloilo City, Philippines: Save the Children Federation, Inc., 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Fishing – Malawi"

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Davey, Neil Gordon, and Michael Kirby Moulton. "Digital Storytelling as an Agricultural Extension Communication Tool in Smallholder Farming and Fishing Communities in Malawi." In Climate Impacts on Agricultural and Natural Resource Sustainability in Africa, 569–85. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-37537-9_32.

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Tweddle, Denis, George F. Turner, and Mohammed B. D. Seisay. "Changes in species composition and abundance as a consequence of fishing in Lake Malombe, Malaŵi." In The Impact of Species Changes in African Lakes, 413–24. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-0563-7_19.

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"Freshwater, Fish and the Future: Proceedings of the Global Cross-Sectoral Conference." In Freshwater, Fish and the Future: Proceedings of the Global Cross-Sectoral Conference, edited by Friday Njaya. American Fisheries Society, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.47886/9789251092637.ch29.

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<em>Abstract</em> .—This paper presents key challenges and lessons experienced during the ecosystem approach to fisheries and aquaculture (EAFA) planning process for the southern Lake Malawi, Mangochi district. This is in response to a near collapse or serious decline of chambo (<em>Oreochromis </em> sp.) harvests in the fishing area due to various ecological and socioeconomic problems such as overfishing, weak enforcement, habitat degradation, conflicting management policies, and deforestation. The estimated annual chambo harvest recorded between 4,000 and 5,000 metric tons in the early 1980s from southern Lake Malawi has now declined by almost 50%. The reduced catch represents a loss of about 2 × 10<sup>9</sup> Malawi kwacha, which is approximately US$5.5 million using 2012 chambo beach prices. The decline in both catch and revenue, therefore, justifies the need to identify policy and governance reforms for recovery and sustainable management of the fishery. Stakeholders recommended the development and implementation of an EAFA plan to guide rebuilding the chambo populations. Aquaculture development within the fishing area was also taken into account for increased supply of farmed chambo for food, nutritional security, and improved livelihoods of the local communities. Key challenges and lessons from the EAFA development process include setting objectives, defining boundaries, extent of consultations, commitment of stakeholders, stakeholder participation, overdependence on fishing, open-access nature of the fishery, conflicts, and limited availability of data. The ecosystem approach to fisheries and aquaculture is a suitable management approach as it considers varied socioeconomic and ecological objectives of a user community.
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"Freshwater, Fish and the Future: Proceedings of the Global Cross-Sectoral Conference." In Freshwater, Fish and the Future: Proceedings of the Global Cross-Sectoral Conference, edited by Friday Njaya. American Fisheries Society, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.47886/9789251092637.ch29.

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<em>Abstract</em> .—This paper presents key challenges and lessons experienced during the ecosystem approach to fisheries and aquaculture (EAFA) planning process for the southern Lake Malawi, Mangochi district. This is in response to a near collapse or serious decline of chambo (<em>Oreochromis </em> sp.) harvests in the fishing area due to various ecological and socioeconomic problems such as overfishing, weak enforcement, habitat degradation, conflicting management policies, and deforestation. The estimated annual chambo harvest recorded between 4,000 and 5,000 metric tons in the early 1980s from southern Lake Malawi has now declined by almost 50%. The reduced catch represents a loss of about 2 × 10<sup>9</sup> Malawi kwacha, which is approximately US$5.5 million using 2012 chambo beach prices. The decline in both catch and revenue, therefore, justifies the need to identify policy and governance reforms for recovery and sustainable management of the fishery. Stakeholders recommended the development and implementation of an EAFA plan to guide rebuilding the chambo populations. Aquaculture development within the fishing area was also taken into account for increased supply of farmed chambo for food, nutritional security, and improved livelihoods of the local communities. Key challenges and lessons from the EAFA development process include setting objectives, defining boundaries, extent of consultations, commitment of stakeholders, stakeholder participation, overdependence on fishing, open-access nature of the fishery, conflicts, and limited availability of data. The ecosystem approach to fisheries and aquaculture is a suitable management approach as it considers varied socioeconomic and ecological objectives of a user community.
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MacPherson, Eleanor, John Sadalaki, Victoria Nyongopa, Lawrence Nkhwazi, Mackwellings Phiri, Alinafe Chimphonda, Nicola Desmond, et al. "Exploring the complexity of microfinance and HIV in fishing communities on the shores of Lake Malawi." In The Political Economy of HIV in Africa, 80–102. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315182629-6.

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"Structure Of A Sample Fishing Community." In Malay Fishermen, 81–99. Routledge, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203001011-6.

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"Planning And Organization Of Fishing Activities." In Malay Fishermen, 100–147. Routledge, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203001011-7.

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"The Fishing Industry In Malaya And Indonesia." In Malay Fishermen, 15–41. Routledge, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203001011-4.

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Evans, Ivor H. N. "Household Utensils, Food, Cooking, Agriculture, Hunting and Fishing, Narcotics, Fire-Making." In The Negritos of Malaya, 57–69. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429060977-7.

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"Marine Artificial Reef Research and Development: Integrating Fisheries Management Objectives." In Marine Artificial Reef Research and Development: Integrating Fisheries Management Objectives, edited by Razak Zakariya and Lenny Sharinee Sakai. American Fisheries Society, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.47886/9781934874516.ch17.

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<em>Abstract</em>.—In recent years, as reported by the Malaysian Department of Fisheries, the decline in demersal fish resources is due to excessive exploitation. This indicates that management and protection of these resources and their habitat are required. <em>Teranas </em>is identified as important critical marine habitat and locally in Malay is defined as a hard rock substrate on the seabed. Teranas can appear in all shapes and sizes, depths, and locations. The combination of these various bottom features often make a teranas attractive to fish. The objective of this study is to detect a teranas so that it can be located and managed through mapping. Sonar in the form of a multibeam echosounder was used to map a teranas with a combination of bathymetry and water column features to identify the signature for teranas. The result produced a signature library to readily identify a teranas with the multibeam echosounder. An important factor in determining the signature for the teranas was the seabed structure and its associated marine life. Bathymetry identified the seabed structure, and the water column characteristics helped verify the presence of marine life. Fishing and visual surveys with scuba diving were also conducted to verify the effectiveness of the multibeam echosounder to identify the teranas. These study results can be used as an aid for planning and managing a teranas to help sustain the associated fisheries resources. Moreover, since a teranas is similar in structure and position to an artificial reef, the multibeam echosounder, when coupled with visual diver-based surveys and fishing effort, could be used to identify the extent and marine fauna associated with an artificial reef. This research will help in providing strategic location selection for artificial reef placement.
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Conference papers on the topic "Fishing – Malawi"

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Aini, Ela Nur, and Atika Wijaya. "Integrated Fisheries Area: A Solution to Overcome the Poverty of Fishing Communities in Sendang Biru Village, Malang Regency (Spatial and Environmental Studies on Rural Areas)." In Proceedings of the International Conference on Rural Studies in Asia (ICoRSIA 2018). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icorsia-18.2019.33.

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Reports on the topic "Fishing – Malawi"

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HIV testing and treatment among adults working in the fishing sector, agricultural estates, and as market vendors in rural southern Malawi. Population Council, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/hiv12.1017.

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