Mitsuo Iinuma - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
I am an international consultant on fisheries development and economics, aquaculture, and fishing community development. Mostly, I am engaged in international cooperation projects in fisheries sector, funded by Japanese Government, in Asia, Africa, Caribbean, and South Pacific. I am also a course leader of training programs to enhance the technical capacities of fisheries officers in developing countries, and a part-time lecturer in Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology (TUMST).
Phone: +81-48-600-2500
Address: IC Net Limited, Land Axis Tower, 27th Floor, 11-2, Shintoshin, Chuo-ku, Saitama-shi, 330-6027 JAPAN
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Papers by Mitsuo Iinuma
Coastal communities in Vanuatu depend heavily on marine resources for household subsistence and c... more Coastal communities in Vanuatu depend heavily on marine resources for household subsistence and cash incomes. However, recent development activities and climate change have altered coastal ecosystems, resulting in a notable decline in coastal marine resources. Thus, in its National Development Plan 2006–2015, the Vanuatu government acknowledged the need for the appropriate management and use of coastal marine resources. However, personnel and technical and budgetary shortcomings have constrained efforts to improve and disseminate community-based coastal marine resource management (CBCRM). As a consequence, the government requested technical cooperation from Japan in providing comprehensive CBCRM. In response, between 2006 and 2009, as requested by the government of Japan, the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) conducted the technical cooperation project “Promotion of Grace of the Sea in the Coastal Villages in the Republic of Vanuatu (Phase I)”. The project focused on the propagation and
culture of easily established shellfish together with community awareness building for coastal resource management (CRM). On Efate Island, the project set up a model for CBCRM. Based on Phase I, the Vanuatu government requested the project to establish CBCRM and to simultaneously improve community livelihoods to ensure their sustainability.
SPC Fisheries Newsletter #144, Aug 2014
SPC Fisheries Newsletter #144, P40-47, Aug 2014
Traditional Issue 32 : Secretariat of Pacific Community, Dec 2013
Conference Presentations by Mitsuo Iinuma
Why Small-scale Fisheries Mattre, World Fisheries Day 2020, 2020
Coastal communities in Vanuatu depend heavily on marine resources for household subsistence and c... more Coastal communities in Vanuatu depend heavily on marine resources for household subsistence and cash incomes. However, recent development activities and climate change have altered coastal ecosystems, resulting in a notable decline in coastal marine resources. Thus, in its National Development Plan 2006–2015, the Vanuatu government acknowledged the need for the appropriate management and use of coastal marine resources. However, personnel and technical and budgetary shortcomings have constrained efforts to improve and disseminate community-based coastal marine resource management (CBCRM). As a consequence, the government requested technical cooperation from Japan in providing comprehensive CBCRM. In response, between 2006 and 2009, as requested by the government of Japan, the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) conducted the technical cooperation project “Promotion of Grace of the Sea in the Coastal Villages in the Republic of Vanuatu (Phase I)”. The project focused on the propagation and
culture of easily established shellfish together with community awareness building for coastal resource management (CRM). On Efate Island, the project set up a model for CBCRM. Based on Phase I, the Vanuatu government requested the project to establish CBCRM and to simultaneously improve community livelihoods to ensure their sustainability.
SPC Fisheries Newsletter #144, Aug 2014
SPC Fisheries Newsletter #144, P40-47, Aug 2014
Traditional Issue 32 : Secretariat of Pacific Community, Dec 2013
Why Small-scale Fisheries Mattre, World Fisheries Day 2020, 2020