Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://csirspace.foodresearchgh.site/handle/123456789/1533
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dc.contributor.authorOvera, R.-
dc.contributor.authorAtter, A.-
dc.contributor.authorAmponsah, S.-
dc.contributor.authorKjellevold, M.-
dc.date.accessioned2022-10-10T08:25:18Z-
dc.date.available2022-10-10T08:25:18Z-
dc.date.issued2022-
dc.identifier.citationMaritime Studies, (2022), 1-16en
dc.identifier.urihttps://csirspace.foodresearchgh.site/handle/123456789/1533-
dc.description.abstractIn Ghana, the role of female informal traders (“market women”) in making low-cost smoked and dried fish available in urban and rural marketplaces is the key to explaining the high consumption of fish in the country. However, market women’s contribution to food security and nutrition (FSN), as well as to fish quality and safety is underrated and poorly understood. Fish marketing requires proficient distribution and preservation skills, economic and sociocultural competence, and a high degree of mobility. Fish traders face numerous constraints related to fish supplies, credit access, hygiene, storage facilities, transport, and market governance, all of which affect their incomes and may affect the quality and safety of fish. The article, which is based on semi-structured interviews with fish traders and fish consumers in coastal and inland markets in Ghana, documents how traders operate and exhibit agency to deal with constraints by activating a range of skills in their profit-making and their fish quality and safety enhancement strategies. The authors argue that policies grounded in knowledge about fish traders’ activities, skills, and working conditions, with budgets that prioritize investment in public infrastructure that caters for market women’s professional and personal needs, can further enhance their ability to supply affordable, safe, and high-quality fish to Ghana’s populationen
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherSpringer Linken
dc.subjectFish marketsen
dc.subjectFemale informal tradersen
dc.subjectAgencyen
dc.subjectFish safetyen
dc.subjectFood securityen
dc.subjectFood nutritionen
dc.subjectGhanaen
dc.titleMarket women’s skills, constraints, and agency in supplying affordable, safe, and high-quality fish in Ghanaen
dc.typeArticleen
dc.journalnameMaritime Studiesen
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