Cambodia: Complex History, Hopeful Future
The Community Fisheries organizations in Cambodia form a vital framework for collective, rights-based fisheries management that persists and thrives in inland and coastal settings to this day. Flanked by two of the world’s largest marine fishing nations—Thailand to the west and Vietnam to the southeast—Cambodia’s relatively modest 435-km coastline has not historically been renowned for marine fisheries. However, despite the long-standing dominance of freshwater fisheries across the Cambodian portion of the Mekong River system, marine fisheries have grown considerably, their production increasing from 75,000 tonnes in 2009 to over 212,000 tonnes in 2018, a 180 percent growth in a decade.
Title of publication: Samudra Report
Issue: 85
ISSN: 0976-1121
Nombre de pages: 18-21
Auteur: Sour Kim, Dan Steadman, Henry Duffy
Organisation: The International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF)
Année: 2021
Pays: Cambodia
Type: Article de revue spécialisée
Texte intégral disponible à l'adresse: https://www.icsf.net/images/samudra/pdf/english/issue_85/4510_art_Sam_85_art05_Cambodia_SourKim.pdf
Langue: English