Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1905
Title: COVID-19 impacts on coastal communities in Kenya
Authors: Lau, J.
Sutcliffe, S.
Barnes, M.
Mbaru, E.
Muly, I.
Muthiga, N.
Wanyonyi, S.
Cinner, J.
Keywords: Covid-19
Coastal communities
Issue Date: 2021
Citation: Jacqueline Lau , Sarah Sutcliffe , Michele Barnes , Emmanuel Mbaru , Innocent Muly , Nyawira Muthiga , Stephen Wanyonyi , Joshua E. Cinner, COVID-19 impacts on coastal communities in Kenya. Marine Policy Volume 134, 104803, December 2021
Series/Report no.: Marine Policy;Volume 134, 104803
Abstract: OVID-19 is continuing to have far-reaching impacts around the world, including on small-scale fishing communities. This study details the findings from 39 in-depth interviews with community members, community leaders, and fish traders in five communities in Kenya about their experiences since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in March, 2020. The interviews were conducted by mobile phone between late August and early October 2020. In each community, people were impacted by curfews, rules about gathering, closed travel routes, and bans on certain activities. Fish trade and fisheries livelihoods were greatly disrupted. Respondents from all communities emphasized how COVID-19 had disrupted relationships between fishers, traders, and customers; changed market demand; and ultimately made fishing and fish trading livelihoods very difficult to sustain. While COVID-19 impacted different groups in the communities—i.e., fishers, female fish traders, and male fish traders—all experienced a loss of income and livelihoods, reduced cash flow, declining food security, and impacts on wellbeing. As such, although small-scale fisheries can act as a crucial safety net in times of stress, the extent of COVID-19 disruptions to alternative and informal livelihoods stemmed cash flow across communities, and meant that fishing was unable to fulfil a safety net function as it may have done during past disruptions. As the pandemic continues to unfold, ensuring that COVID-19 safe policies and protocols support continued fishing or diversification into other informal livelihoods, and that COVID-19 support reaches the most vulnerable, will be critical in safeguarding the wellbeing of families in these coastal communities.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1905
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