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Identifying sustainability priorities among value chain actors in artisanal common octopus fisheries

Authors :
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España)
European Commission
Xunta de Galicia
Ainsworth, Gillian B.
Pita, Pablo
Pita, Cristina
Roumbedakis, Katina
Pierce, Graham J.
Longo, Catherine
Verutes, Gregory
Fonseca, Teresa
Castelo, Daniela
Montero-Castaño, Carlos
Valeiras, J.
Rocha, Francisco
García‑de‑la‑Fuente, Laura
Acuña Fernández, José Luis
Fernández Rueda, M. del Pino
Garazo, Alberto
Martín-Aristín, Alberto
Villasante, Sebastián
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España)
European Commission
Xunta de Galicia
Ainsworth, Gillian B.
Pita, Pablo
Pita, Cristina
Roumbedakis, Katina
Pierce, Graham J.
Longo, Catherine
Verutes, Gregory
Fonseca, Teresa
Castelo, Daniela
Montero-Castaño, Carlos
Valeiras, J.
Rocha, Francisco
García‑de‑la‑Fuente, Laura
Acuña Fernández, José Luis
Fernández Rueda, M. del Pino
Garazo, Alberto
Martín-Aristín, Alberto
Villasante, Sebastián
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The United Nations (UN) Decade of Ocean Science highlights a need to improve the way in which scientific results effectively inform action and policies regarding the ocean. Our research contributes to achieving this goal by identifying practical actions, barriers, stakeholder contributions and resources required to increase the sustainability of activities carried out in the context of artisanal fisheries to meet UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) and International Year of Artisanal Fisheries and Aquaculture (IYAFA) Global Action Plan (GAP) Pillar targets. We conducted a novel ‘social value chain analysis’ via a participatory workshop to elicit perspectives of value chain actors and fisheries stakeholders associated with two Spanish artisanal common octopus (Octopus vulgaris) fisheries (western Asturias—Marine Stewardship Council [MSC] certified, and Galicia—non-MSC certified) about their priorities regarding sustainable octopus production and commercialization. Our adapted Rapfish sustainability framework emphasised the importance of economic, environmental, ethical, institutional, social, and technological indicators to different actors across the value chain. We mapped participants’ shared sustainability priorities (e.g. integrated fisheries management, knowledge-based management, product traceability) to six Rapfish indicators, seven IYAFA Pillars and twelve SDGs to reveal how our results can inform ocean policy and actions. This identified how certification incentives and other cooperative approaches can facilitate environmental, economic and social sustainability (e.g. value-added products, price premiums for producers, gender inclusive organisations); support IYAFA priority outcomes (raised awareness, strengthened science-policy interface, empowered stakeholders, partnerships); and help to achieve UN SDG targets (e.g. SDG 14.b, SDG 17.17). The results can inform actors, stakeholders and policymakers about how different actors contribute to efforts to achi

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1406079384
Document Type :
Electronic Resource