Fishing for coherence : fisheries and development policies


OECD. Publishing
Bok Engelsk 2006 · Electronic books.
Flere språk: Fransk
Annen tittel
Medvirkende
Neiland, A ( Contributor )
Utgitt
Paris : OECD , c2006
Omfang
134 s.
Opplysninger
Inneholder Fransk-engelsk og Engelsk-fransk ordliste, S. 107-134. - TABLE OF CONTENTS; Foreword; Executive Summary; Acronyms and Abbreviations; Preface; Chapter 1. Introduction; Definition of Objectives and Outputs; Approach and Methodology; Chapter 2. An Overview of Policy Coherence; Introduction, definitions and themes; A new subject area; Linkage to development policy; Governance principle; Impact of policy incoherence; DAC priority areas; Pressing issue; Global perspective; Underlying causes of policy incoherence; Improving policy coherence; Further analysis; Chapter 3. The Conceptual Basis for Fisheries Policy Coherence; Introduction. - Fisheries management systemsFisheries development and poverty reduction; Fisheries governance; Governance; Policy context; Policy process; Conclusion; Chapter 4. Fisheries in OECD and non-OECD Countries Compared; Introduction; Environment; Technology; Economics; Social issues; Governance in fisheries; Summary; Chapter 5. Typology of Policy Coherence Issues in Fisheries and Identificationof Future Research of Needs; Introduction; Typology of policy coherence in fisheries; Type I: "Policy coherence is achieved"; Type II: "Policy coherence is partial". - Glossary: Part B: English to French. - Type III: "Policy coherence is not a priority"Type IV: "Policy coherence is ignored or neglected or overlooked"; A "process approach" to policy coherence: key issues; Identification of future research needs; Chapter 6. Conclusions and Considerations; Bibliography; Annex 1. A Preliminary Comparison of Fisheries between OECD andnon-OECD Countries; Annex 2. Key International Conventions, Agreements and Declarationswith Regard to Fisheries, Poverty and Development; Annex 3. OECD Action for a Shared Development Agenda; Annex 4. Glossary: Part A: French to English. - For millions of people in developing countries, fisheries represent a means of livelihood, a source of food and nutrition, and a source of wealth for economic growth. Fish often constitutes the sole source of protein for many people, especially the poor. Yet the risks to sustainable fisheries are high. Three quarters of global marine fisheries are overexploited or fully exploited, and the pressure on fish stocks is increasing. Demand for fish in the developed countries, which currently absorb 80% of traded fish, is increasing while the demand for fish in developing countries is likely to augme
Emner
Sjanger
Dewey
ISBN
9264023941

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