This aquaculture investment targets Bangladesh and Nigeria, two countries where the growth of aquaculture provides significant opportunities to enhance the income of smallholder families, the diets and nutrition of vulnerable women and children and the empowerment of women. The 18-month scoping investment in Nigeria recognizes the potential for aquaculture to contribute more significantly to the country’s development goals, but it is more exploratory in nature. Nigeria is the second-largest aquaculture producer in Africa, with a high demand and preference for fish among many consumers. Unlike Bangladesh, where some positive progress has been made, the role and potential of aquaculture to achieve goals for smallholder income, dietary diversification, and women's empowerment have not yet been met in Nigeria. Building on earlier scoping undertaken by WorldFish in 2017, the investment will enable WorldFish to draw on lessons from Bangladesh, and its global network of researchers and partnerships, to fill critical gaps that remain in the knowledge base in Nigeria to provide an evidence base from which informed future investment decisions can be made. The project has an immediate objective of delivering, within 18 months of start-up, a scoping of aquaculture sector bottlenecks, based on fish production, consumption and value chain models that have high potential to positively impact smallholder income, nutrition, youth employment and women’s empowerment at scale.
Featured Dataverses

In order to use this feature you must have at least one published or linked dataverse.

Publish Dataverse

Are you sure you want to publish your dataverse? Once you do so it must remain published.

Publish Dataverse

This dataverse cannot be published because the dataverse it is in has not been published.

Delete Dataverse

Are you sure you want to delete your dataverse? You cannot undelete this dataverse.

Advanced Search

21 to 22 of 22 Results
Jan 4, 2022
Haque, S.M. Faridul; Choudhury, Afrina; Adam, Rahma; McDougall, Cynthia, 2022, "Rapid assessment on gender dynamics, barriers, opportunities and risks in agriculture and aquaculture sectors in northwestern Bangladesh", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/JU9ATC, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Generally Aquaculture in Bangladesh is perceived as men’s work (Barman, 2001) which implies that women has limited or no access to and benefit from aquaculture. Under this circumstance, this study aims to identify the factors associated with women’s limited participation in aquaculture. In addition to that, the study also aims to explore the existi...
Aug 7, 2020
Dizyee, Kanar; Powell, Andrea; Williams, Gemma; Shikuku, Kelvin Mashisia; Tran, Nhuong; Byrd, Kendra; Chan, Chin Yee; Bogard, Jessica; Steensma, Joe; Nukpezah, Julius A.; Adegoke, Agbabiaka Lukman; Subasinghe, Rohana; Siriwardena, Sunil, 2020, "Nigeria: post-farmgate value chain (wholesalers, processors, and retailers) scoping study dataset", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/SFZZAH, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:DAPjkhhbEn9xNhKS1gL/qg== [fileUNF]
Nigeria is the largest fish producer in Sub-Sahara Africa. Fish plays crucial role to support fish producers and post-farm gate value chain actors’ livelihood. Despite the virtues of aquaculture and fisheries sub-sectors to enhance value chain actors livelihood, major gaps exist related to fish value chain efficiencies, including financial performa...
Add Data

Sign up or log in to create a dataverse or add a dataset.

Share Dataverse

Share this dataverse on your favorite social media networks.

Link Dataverse
Reset Modifications

Are you sure you want to reset the selected metadata fields? If you do this, any customizations (hidden, required, optional) you have done will no longer appear.