Authors
Sergio LM Rivero, Oriana Trindade de Almeida, Patricia Carignano Torres, Andre de Moraes, Erick Chacón-Montalván, Luke Parry
Publication date
2022/12/2
Journal
The Journal of Development Studies
Volume
58
Issue
12
Pages
2544-2565
Publisher
Routledge
Description
Fishing provides livelihoods and food for millions of people in the Global South yet inland fisheries are under-researched and neglected in food and nutrition policy. This paper goes beyond the rural focus of existing research and examines how urban households may use fishing as a livelihood strategy for coping with food insecurity. Our study in Brazilian Amazonia is based on a random sample of households (n = 798) in four remote riverine towns. We quantitatively examine the inter-connections between fishing and food insecurity, and find that fishing is a widespread coping strategy among disadvantaged, food insecure households. Fisher households tend to be highly dependent on eating fish, and for these households, consuming fish more often is associated with a modest reduction in food insecurity risks. Fishing provides monthly non-monetary income worth ≤ USD54 (equivalent to ∼12% of mean …
Total citations
2023202422
Scholar articles
SLM Rivero, OT Almeida, PC Torres, A de Moraes… - The Journal of Development Studies, 2022