Difference between revisions of "Portal:GIFS/Social"
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+ | <span style="color:#3a75c4; Font-size: 130%"><small>Socio-cultural </small></span><br /> | ||
+ | The socio-cultural theme outlines the interrelatedness of communities and fisheries through focusing on ''sense of place, women in fisheries and photography.'' | ||
+ | |||
<div>{{#display_map: | <div>{{#display_map: | ||
50.860144,0.572609~[[Socio_Cultural_Hastings|Capturing local stakeholder shared values for the cultural benefits of the Hastings marine environment and activities within it such as inshore fishing]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/1/15/Hastings.png; | 50.860144,0.572609~[[Socio_Cultural_Hastings|Capturing local stakeholder shared values for the cultural benefits of the Hastings marine environment and activities within it such as inshore fishing]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/1/15/Hastings.png; | ||
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:''“I have been working at the fish since I was 18 years old, I started fileting with a knife and when I quit fileting I’ve been selling in the market the fish… And then I become a fishwife and I am the town crier”.'' | :''“I have been working at the fish since I was 18 years old, I started fileting with a knife and when I quit fileting I’ve been selling in the market the fish… And then I become a fishwife and I am the town crier”.'' | ||
:Suzanne is an example of women’s contribution to the fishing industry promotion. She is involved at the annual local fish festival where she demonstrates the skills required to become a good fish fileter. She has worked for many years in processing companies in Breskens.~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/8/8d/Processing.png; | :Suzanne is an example of women’s contribution to the fishing industry promotion. She is involved at the annual local fish festival where she demonstrates the skills required to become a good fish fileter. She has worked for many years in processing companies in Breskens.~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/8/8d/Processing.png; | ||
− | 51.203050, 2.895264~Belgium Flanders Women~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/8/8a/Femalesymbol5.png; | + | 51.203050, 2.895264~[[Belgium Flanders Women]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/8/8a/Femalesymbol5.png; |
51.504245, 3.671628~[[Arnemuiden and its fishing history]]~~http://www.googlemapsmarkers.com/v1/755426/; | 51.504245, 3.671628~[[Arnemuiden and its fishing history]]~~http://www.googlemapsmarkers.com/v1/755426/; | ||
51.503363, 3.673002~[[Women's Think Tank]]~~http://www.googlemapsmarkers.com/v1/755426/; | 51.503363, 3.673002~[[Women's Think Tank]]~~http://www.googlemapsmarkers.com/v1/755426/; | ||
− | 51.233706, 2.921586~ | + | 51.233706, 2.921586~Mrs. Dini Bogaert, Fishmonger at the market from Oostende<br /> |
− | :''“For me the fishing community is at the fish market in Ostend, that is where as a normal person you can see the fish come in see the | + | :''“For me the fishing community is at the fish market in Ostend, that is where as a normal person you can see the fish come in, see the fishermen’s wives, see the fish being sold, that is the community for me”''. |
+ | :Dini is a young woman who proudly promotes the inshore fishing activity. Her father does the fishing and she sells the catch at the market, an example of women contribution to the business economy.[[File:Dinibogaert.jpg|500px]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/b/bf/Trading.png; | ||
51.232597, 2.930409~[[File:Stephaniemaes.jpg|100px]] Stephanie Maes, Flag Manager - Oostende<br /> | 51.232597, 2.930409~[[File:Stephaniemaes.jpg|100px]] Stephanie Maes, Flag Manager - Oostende<br /> | ||
− | :''“I am the FLAG co-ordinator. A FLAG is a Fishery Local Action Group, so Europe decided that one part of the budget of the European Fisheries Fund, they wouldn’t decide which projects | + | :''“I am the FLAG co-ordinator. A FLAG is a Fishery Local Action Group, so Europe decided that one part of the budget of the European Fisheries Fund, they wouldn’t decide which projects get to run but that local groups would get to decide. So the FLAG groups decide which projects get approved and each group needs a Secretary, so I am the Secretary and this means I prepare the meetings, we open calls. So one way I help people working on these projects is making sure people collaborate because that is important for the group. We act as a group and facilitate cooperation. On the other hand I help the group in preparing their decision, the decision making body. At the same time when projects are approved I follow up by looking for links between projects.”''<br /> |
+ | :As a FLAG (Fishery Local Action Group) Manager Stephanie is a good example of women’s contribution to political endeavours in fisheries. Her role, directly involved in community participation, is to support the creation of local initiatives for fishermen. ~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/2/22/Policy.png; | ||
51.500777, 3.672478~[[File:50254 fish-monger---poissonnier---leurster.jpg|75px]] ''Fragment over Visleuren''<br /> | 51.500777, 3.672478~[[File:50254 fish-monger---poissonnier---leurster.jpg|75px]] ''Fragment over Visleuren''<br /> | ||
:“Ik ben van Belzen, een echte Erremunaer. Hier geboren en getogen. Ik weet nog goed hoe ik hier als klein ventje stond te kijken naar de visleursters en visleurders. Via deze straat gingen ze met hun lege manden naar de vismijn op het stationsplein. Daar kochten ze vis en garnalen. Meestal ging ik even kijken bij de vismijn, want daar was altijd wat te beleven. De vissersvrouwen kochten vaak samen een partij en deelden die in porties. Ze hadden een goede manier om de vis eerlijk te verdelen. Een vrouw wees een portie vis aan en een andere vrouw die omgedraaid stond, noemde willekeurig een naam voor wie de vis was. Dit ging zo door tot alle vis was verdeeld. De garnalen moesten nog worden gepeld. Dat was veel werk waar het hele gezin een avond zoet mee was en de volwassenen soms wel tot diep in de nacht. Enkele visleurders en -leursters liepen met hun volle manden naar Middelburg, Veere of Vlissingen. [[Fragment_over_Visleuren|read more.]] | :“Ik ben van Belzen, een echte Erremunaer. Hier geboren en getogen. Ik weet nog goed hoe ik hier als klein ventje stond te kijken naar de visleursters en visleurders. Via deze straat gingen ze met hun lege manden naar de vismijn op het stationsplein. Daar kochten ze vis en garnalen. Meestal ging ik even kijken bij de vismijn, want daar was altijd wat te beleven. De vissersvrouwen kochten vaak samen een partij en deelden die in porties. Ze hadden een goede manier om de vis eerlijk te verdelen. Een vrouw wees een portie vis aan en een andere vrouw die omgedraaid stond, noemde willekeurig een naam voor wie de vis was. Dit ging zo door tot alle vis was verdeeld. De garnalen moesten nog worden gepeld. Dat was veel werk waar het hele gezin een avond zoet mee was en de volwassenen soms wel tot diep in de nacht. Enkele visleurders en -leursters liepen met hun volle manden naar Middelburg, Veere of Vlissingen. [[Fragment_over_Visleuren|read more.]] | ||
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:''“I want to be a member of this community and I still love to live here and I want to see that people from outside see that it is a nice place to live, of course you have more economic activities here, but also let people from this village know that they are living in a special place, because they are totally unaware. They know about maybe their grandfather’s history and that is it. When I was a girl, I was 12 years old and I went to school in Middelburg, I was a little ashamed to say I was from Arnemuiden, they wanted to know if I spoke Dutch in dialect which was unfashionable then although now it is fashionable. People looked down on you then, we are fishermen, we had a bad name ‘fish- heads’. Now the winds are changing. Now it is a nice place to live with a nice history, a nice environment and a good community”.'' [[Arnemuiden_women_jj|read more.]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/b/b9/Tourism.png; | :''“I want to be a member of this community and I still love to live here and I want to see that people from outside see that it is a nice place to live, of course you have more economic activities here, but also let people from this village know that they are living in a special place, because they are totally unaware. They know about maybe their grandfather’s history and that is it. When I was a girl, I was 12 years old and I went to school in Middelburg, I was a little ashamed to say I was from Arnemuiden, they wanted to know if I spoke Dutch in dialect which was unfashionable then although now it is fashionable. People looked down on you then, we are fishermen, we had a bad name ‘fish- heads’. Now the winds are changing. Now it is a nice place to live with a nice history, a nice environment and a good community”.'' [[Arnemuiden_women_jj|read more.]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/b/b9/Tourism.png; | ||
51.501938, 3.682532~[[Arnemuiden and its social context]]~~http://www.googlemapsmarkers.com/v1/755426/; | 51.501938, 3.682532~[[Arnemuiden and its social context]]~~http://www.googlemapsmarkers.com/v1/755426/; | ||
− | 47.800436, -4.279167~[[Concarneau-Le_Guilvinec_Women Concarneau-Le Guilvinec]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/d/df/Femalesymbol3.png; | + | 47.800436, -4.279167~[[Concarneau-Le_Guilvinec_Women|Concarneau-Le Guilvinec]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/d/df/Femalesymbol3.png; |
+ | 47.882931, -3.920051~[[Concarneau-Le_Guilvinec_Women|Concarneau-Le Guilvinec]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/d/df/Femalesymbol3.png; | ||
+ | 47.870098, -3.910781~[[File:Charlotte_Delzenne.jpg|100px]] Charlotte Delzenne, Merchant Navy captain and trainer at The European Maritime Training Centre<br /> | ||
+ | :''“I teach fishermen to navigate properly. I either teach them when they are very young and with a basic level, as it was the case 2 years ago. I teach them about navigation, safety, stability and all that. I might also train at higher levels when they consider getting diplomas and improve professionally”.'' | ||
+ | :Charlotte represents the educational contribution of women to the industry. After acquiring experience on board she has now the responsibility to instil in young fishermen the requirements for fishing as a profession.~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/6/6b/Education.png; | ||
+ | 48.096366, -4.331463~[[Douarnenez_Women|Douarnenez]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/0/07/Femalesymbol4.png; | ||
+ | 48.100780, -4.344766~[[File:Françoise Pencalet.jpg|100px]] Françoise Pencalet, Maritime Historian<br /> | ||
+ | :''“My grandfather was a sardine fisherman, and my father was a spine lobster fisherman in Mauritania..I spent a fortnight with the crew on board...I saw my father’s activity from another angle, and for my history training, I decided to draft my thesis based on this and published a book…my sister has made a movie on spiny lobster with my father’s recordings in the seventies…Through our work we have tried to enhance our father’s work, depending on our skills. Mine was in the field of history, and my sister, in the field of cinema”.'' | ||
+ | :This historian specialised in fishing history and wrote a book on the development and decline of the lobster industry. She is the daughter of a retired fisherman and her position has allowed her to contribute toward the historical heritage of fishing in the region.~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/b/b9/Tourism.png; | ||
+ | 48.091378, -4.325025~[[File:Veronique Le Berre.jpg|100px]] Veronique Le Berre, Associate Partner<br /> | ||
+ | :''“My name is Véronique Lebert and I am a fisherman´s wife. I am his partner and co-worker. We have this statute of husband & wife business partnership [French status called “conjoint collaborateur”]. My husband is the fisherman and I sell the fish at the market of Treboul, every day, depending on fishing days.”'' | ||
+ | :Véronique is an associate partner of her husband. In France direct sales are permitted to small boat owners and wives can form a partnership with their husband allowing them to have a pension and to consider selling the fish as a professional career. This is an example of how political recognition of women’s activities in fisheries can facilitate and improve the fisherman and his family’s economic condition.~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/b/bf/Trading.png; | ||
+ | 50.107852, -5.550372~[[Newlyn_Women|Newlyn]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/4/4a/Femalesymbol6.png; | ||
+ | 50.111518, -5.545520~[[File:Elizabeth Stevenson.jpg|100px]] Elizabeth Stevenson, Company Director<br /> | ||
+ | :"“In 1971 I started working in the family business, 9th August 1971, so 42 years I have been in the business. In 1988 I became partners of W Stevenson & Sons, a few years ago I became a shareholder of W Stevenson & Sons Ltd. I have been a member of the Board of the Cornish Fish Producers Association for a long time and as a result of that I was an Executive Member of the of National Federation of Fishermen’s Organisations and was asked to put myself forward to be Chairman of that, so I was Chairman of the NFFO in 2000, there was an election and I became the first woman chairman, I did two years as Chairman of that then two years as President of that. I have been a Board Member of the Seafish Industry Authority. Seafish is a government quango, I was a government appointee on that. I have been a member of the training association, Seafood Cornwall, I have represented at one time England, Wales and Northern Ireland in Brussels at fuel discussions with other EU nations a couple of times, I have met lots of fishermen, representatives, ministers, prime ministers, royal family all those sorts of things, I am very proud of that. I laid a wreath at the Cenotaph on remembrance Sunday with the members of the Navy, at the televised event on behalf of the fishing industry. I was standing in a row with the Lord West and few of the others and Commonwealth Representatives and the Queen on the right, that was one of the things I am most proud of.”" | ||
+ | :Elizabeth is a remarkable woman whose work experience allows her to represent the fishing industry in political, economic and socio-cultural arenas.~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/5/52/Administration.png; | ||
+ | 52.945539, 0.876925~[[Wells-next-the Sea_Women|Wells-next-the Sea]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/1/10/Femalesymbol7.png; | ||
+ | 52.951124, 0.832980~[[File:Mary Linley.jpg|100px]] Mary Linley, Crab Dresser, Wells-Next the sea.<br /> | ||
+ | :"“In the 1960s, after school we used to go home and dress crabs, a crab still’s a crab after all these years. My brothers go to sea and get the crabs and we dress them and then they are taken to the store for sale”." | ||
+ | :Mary is one of the few ladies from the older generation in Wells who have dressed crabs throughout her life. Working in her family business with her two brothers and sisters in law, this skilful lady is an example of economic contribution to the local economy.~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/8/8d/Processing.png; | ||
+ | 52.931571, 1.302134~[[Cromer_Women|Cromer]]~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/9/9f/Femalesymbol8.png; | ||
+ | 52.932503, 1.295396~[[File:Hilary Cox.jpg|100px]] Hilary Cox, IFCA Representative<br /> | ||
+ | :"“I am Hilary Cox, a Councillor for Norfolk County. My ward is Cromer on the coast and five villages just inside inland, I am chairman of the Eastern IFCA which is an outside organisation through the county council. It was the Eastern Sea Fisheries but became the IFCA a couple of years ago with wider stakeholders, a more informed authority with greater powers. In the fishing industry for myself I am married to a fisherman of 55 years, crabs and lobsters, a local Cromer fisherman… As an IFCA we have to provide consideration to conversation, social and economic issues that sustain a viable fishery”." | ||
+ | :As a woman Hillary Cox represents the knowledge of social issues in fisheries and in this position she is able to assume a political stance.~~http://www.coastalwiki.org/w/images/2/22/Policy.png | ||
|type=terrain | |type=terrain | ||
|zoom=6 | |zoom=6 | ||
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| '''Catching''' || | | '''Catching''' || | ||
[[File:Catching.png|none|link=]] | [[File:Catching.png|none|link=]] | ||
− | || {{#info:This refers to the activity of capturing fish or aquatic animals. The use of the term in this research does not include farmed fish. Only 2% of the female participants in the research have fished on board a boat. In all cases this activity was encouraged and taught by their fathers.}} | + | || {{#info:This refers to the activity of capturing fish or aquatic animals. The use of the term in this research does not include farmed fish. Only 2% of the female participants in the research have fished on board a boat. In all cases this activity was encouraged and taught by their fathers. <small>''Please see [http://www.gifsproject.eu/images/pdf/GIFS_Toolkit.pdf The 21st Century Catch Toolkit], pp.83-87 for details''</small>.}} |
| '''Trading''' || | | '''Trading''' || | ||
[[File:trading.png|none|link=]] | [[File:trading.png|none|link=]] | ||
− | || {{#info:15% of the total women interviewed contributed to the fishing industry through their participation in fish trading which involves: buying at auction, transportation and distribution of fish, selling fish over the phone as well as at fishmongers - often their own.}} | + | || {{#info:15% of the total women interviewed contributed to the fishing industry through their participation in fish trading which involves: buying at auction, transportation and distribution of fish, selling fish over the phone as well as at fishmongers - often their own. <small>''Please see [http://www.gifsproject.eu/images/pdf/GIFS_Toolkit.pdf The 21st Century Catch Toolkit], pp.83-87 for details''</small>.}} |
| '''Processing''' || | | '''Processing''' || | ||
[[File:processing.png|none|link=]] | [[File:processing.png|none|link=]] | ||
− | || {{#info:Fish processing involves gutting, boning, filleting, cooking and packing fish. 15% of women who were interviewed worked in processing plants.}} | + | || {{#info:Fish processing involves gutting, boning, filleting, cooking and packing fish. 15% of women who were interviewed worked in processing plants. <small>''Please see [http://www.gifsproject.eu/images/pdf/GIFS_Toolkit.pdf The 21st Century Catch Toolkit], pp.83-87 for details''</small>.}} |
| '''Tourism/Heritage''' || | | '''Tourism/Heritage''' || | ||
[[File:tourism.png|none|link=]] | [[File:tourism.png|none|link=]] | ||
− | || {{#info:The preservation of the fishing legacy in the towns is one of the greatest contributions of women to this sector. Many of the 13% of women interviewed, who worked in this activity, demonstrated pride in their role, and in many cases worked voluntarily for the preservation of the fishing heritage amongst young people and tourists, thereby contributing to the cultural heritage of their towns and society.}} | + | || {{#info:The preservation of the fishing legacy in the towns is one of the greatest contributions of women to this sector. Many of the 13% of women interviewed, who worked in this activity, demonstrated pride in their role, and in many cases worked voluntarily for the preservation of the fishing heritage amongst young people and tourists, thereby contributing to the cultural heritage of their towns and society. <small>''Please see [http://www.gifsproject.eu/images/pdf/GIFS_Toolkit.pdf The 21st Century Catch Toolkit], pp.83-87 for details''</small>.}} |
|- | |- | ||
| '''Education''' || | | '''Education''' || | ||
[[File:education.png|none|link=]] | [[File:education.png|none|link=]] | ||
− | || {{#info:Women are actively involved in the education of fishermen and communities. 15% of the women interviewed worked in relation to transference of knowledge, skills or the traditions of fishing.}} | + | || {{#info:Women are actively involved in the education of fishermen and communities. 15% of the women interviewed worked in relation to transference of knowledge, skills or the traditions of fishing. <small>''Please see [http://www.gifsproject.eu/images/pdf/GIFS_Toolkit.pdf The 21st Century Catch Toolkit], pp.83-87 for details''</small>.}} |
| '''Policy''' || | | '''Policy''' || | ||
[[File:policy.png|none|link=]] | [[File:policy.png|none|link=]] | ||
− | || {{#info:Women participate dynamically in regulatory activities relating to the fishing industry. 18% of women surveyed were supporting the industry through participation in policymaking processes.}} | + | || {{#info:Women participate dynamically in regulatory activities relating to the fishing industry. 18% of women surveyed were supporting the industry through participation in policymaking processes. <small>''Please see [http://www.gifsproject.eu/images/pdf/GIFS_Toolkit.pdf The 21st Century Catch Toolkit], pp.83-87 for details''</small>.}} |
| '''Administration/Management''' || | | '''Administration/Management''' || | ||
[[File:administration.png|none|link=]] | [[File:administration.png|none|link=]] | ||
− | || {{#info:Women working in the coordination of efforts for businesses success and supportive institutions of the fishing industry. 13% of the women interviewed worked in the supervision or control of an activity in support of the fishermen’s interests.}} | + | || {{#info:Women working in the coordination of efforts for businesses success and supportive institutions of the fishing industry. 13% of the women interviewed worked in the supervision or control of an activity in support of the fishermen’s interests <small>''Please see [http://www.gifsproject.eu/images/pdf/GIFS_Toolkit.pdf The 21st Century Catch Toolkit], pp.83-87 for details''</small>..}} |
| '''Household''' || | | '''Household''' || | ||
[[File:household.png|none|link=]] | [[File:household.png|none|link=]] | ||
− | || {{#info:The carer role represents the traditional division of labour between men and women; it means that women are responsible for the children and home while the men are out at sea. 17% of the women interviewed contributed to the industry through their work in the household.}} | + | || {{#info:The carer role represents the traditional division of labour between men and women; it means that women are responsible for the children and home while the men are out at sea. 17% of the women interviewed contributed to the industry through their work in the household. <small>''Please see [http://www.gifsproject.eu/images/pdf/GIFS_Toolkit.pdf The 21st Century Catch Toolkit], pp.83-87 for details''</small>.}} |
|} | |} | ||
</div> | </div> |
Latest revision as of 09:26, 18 December 2014
Overview | Background information | Economics | Education | Fishing Past&Present | Governance | Socio - Cultural | Tourism |
Socio-cultural
The socio-cultural theme outlines the interrelatedness of communities and fisheries through focusing on sense of place, women in fisheries and photography.
Sense of place
The content is currently in development.
Women in fisheries
Women and social cohesion in coastal communities (1-8) | |||||||||||
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Catching | This refers to the activity of capturing fish or aquatic animals. The use of the term in this research does not include farmed fish. Only 2% of the female participants in the research have fished on board a boat. In all cases this activity was encouraged and taught by their fathers. <small>Please see The 21st Century Catch Toolkit, pp.83-87 for details</small>. | Trading | 15% of the total women interviewed contributed to the fishing industry through their participation in fish trading which involves: buying at auction, transportation and distribution of fish, selling fish over the phone as well as at fishmongers - often their own. <small>Please see The 21st Century Catch Toolkit, pp.83-87 for details</small>. | Processing | Fish processing involves gutting, boning, filleting, cooking and packing fish. 15% of women who were interviewed worked in processing plants. <small>Please see The 21st Century Catch Toolkit, pp.83-87 for details</small>. | Tourism/Heritage | The preservation of the fishing legacy in the towns is one of the greatest contributions of women to this sector. Many of the 13% of women interviewed, who worked in this activity, demonstrated pride in their role, and in many cases worked voluntarily for the preservation of the fishing heritage amongst young people and tourists, thereby contributing to the cultural heritage of their towns and society. <small>Please see The 21st Century Catch Toolkit, pp.83-87 for details</small>. | ||||
Education | Women are actively involved in the education of fishermen and communities. 15% of the women interviewed worked in relation to transference of knowledge, skills or the traditions of fishing. <small>Please see The 21st Century Catch Toolkit, pp.83-87 for details</small>. | Policy | Women participate dynamically in regulatory activities relating to the fishing industry. 18% of women surveyed were supporting the industry through participation in policymaking processes. <small>Please see The 21st Century Catch Toolkit, pp.83-87 for details</small>. | Administration/Management | Women working in the coordination of efforts for businesses success and supportive institutions of the fishing industry. 13% of the women interviewed worked in the supervision or control of an activity in support of the fishermen’s interests <small>Please see The 21st Century Catch Toolkit, pp.83-87 for details</small>.. | Household | The carer role represents the traditional division of labour between men and women; it means that women are responsible for the children and home while the men are out at sea. 17% of the women interviewed contributed to the industry through their work in the household. <small>Please see The 21st Century Catch Toolkit, pp.83-87 for details</small>. |
Photography
The content is currently in development.