Improvements Will Boost Livelihoods and
Environmental Conservation
WASHINGTON and ROME, May 9 /PRNewswire/ --
More accessible and better oriented literacy and
education programs for fishing communities will
improve their livelihoods while diversifying
their income-generating activities, according to
a new report prepared by FAO.
The report will be presented on May 10 by
Professor Bryan Maddox from the University of
East Anglia. It is based on field work carried
out mainly by the Sustainable Fisheries
Livelihoods Program, a partnership between FAO,
the Department for International Development of
the United Kingdom (DFID) and 25 countries in
West and Central Africa
(http://www.sflp.org).
"Fishing communities often face educational
disadvantage due to geographical and social
marginalization. Education providers are often
unable or unwilling to provide services tailored
to mobile and migratory populations which
include many fisherfolk," the report says.
"Literacy and education are crucial for
fisheries management, environmental conservation
and livelihoods diversification," says FAO
expert Benoit Horemans, who coordinates the
Program.
"However, they should be task oriented,
flexible and responsive to the fishing
communities' needs and aspirations. This is what
we call 'functional' literacy which, in contrast
to formal schooling, has an applied, real-life
orientation," Mr. Horemans explains.
For example, fishermen should be given
appropriate education to deal with satellite
navigation, understand the mechanisms of
microfinance and use new information and digital
technologies, such as mobile phones and the
Internet.
In Uganda, Nigeria and Gambia, although
levels of school attendance in fishing
communities are high (60-80% having attended
school), people have not gained enough
functional literacy skills to enable them to
access resources and to understand official
documents, the report points out.
Vernacular literacy
The FAO/DFID report also underlines the
importance of "the vernacular literacy and
numeracy practices of small scale fishing
communities which often go unnoticed."
The report recommends to building on existing
strengths: "Fishing communities' existing
traditions and practices are an important
resource to build on."
The report highlights some examples of
successful literacy projects/programs in fishing
communities, such as the Bay of Bengal Program,
the Icelandic Development Agency's Program on
Lake Victoria in Kenya, where adult literacy
classes for women encouraged debate on health
and business issues such as improving the income
of traditional enterprises and developing new
sources of income.
The Education for Rural People Global
Partnership and the FAO Interdepartmental
Working Group on Training, which includes
experts from both the Fisheries and the
Sustainable Development Departments,
participated in the elaboration of the report.
Its ultimate goal is to reduce the education gap
between rural and urban communities with a view
to achieving the Millennium Development
Goals.
CONTACT: Michael Hage, Regional Information
Officer of FAO, +1-202-653-0011, or
michael.hage@fao.org
Web site:
http://www.fao.org/english/newsroom/
http://www.sflp.org/
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