Peer-reviewed Journal Articles

Conservation International's science is the foundation for all our work. Our global science team is dedicated to advancing conservation science — pursuing actionable knowledge and amplifying it through partnerships and outreach.

To date, Conservation International has published more than 1,300 peer-reviewed articles, many in leading journals including Science, Nature and the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Here is an archive of our most recent research:

Insights from a community of practice: Integrating human rights in fisheries improvement

Elena M. Finkbeiner, Christopher Giordano, Juno Fitzpatrick, Ashley Apel, Cecilia Blasco, Kathryn H. Dalton, Juan Carlos Jerí, Ines Lopez-Ercilla, Gabrielle E. Lout, Chris Madden, Ivan Martinez-Tovar, Pablo Obregon, Jada Tullos Anderson, John N. Kittinger

Marine Policy, 163, 106100

May 01, 2024

A recent article authored by Williams and Sparks suggests that fishery improvement projects (FIPs) “as currently constituted and reported, will not be an effective part of the fight against labour exploitation and abuses in global industrial fisheries.” We wish to reinforce their argument that driving social responsibility improvements in global fisheries requires a systemic approach combining genuine worker representation, mandatory human rights due diligence, enforceable and legally binding agreements, changes to purchasing practices, and the ratification and implementation of international labor and human rights conventions, and we acknowledge that the FIP model alone will fall short of this. Based on our collective experience working towards social improvements in fisheries, we wish to bring a slightly more nuanced perspective to bear to demonstrate the critical importance of using a human rights-based approach in fisheries’ sustainability efforts across industrial and artisanal contexts. We structure this response by revisiting each of the main points Williams and Sparks raise, bringing in our own experiences and additional evidence to build upon their original remarks, suggesting: there is a need for continuous monitoring and improvements in dynamic risk environments; voluntary measures can lead to and buttress mandatory and legally binding measures; diverse fisheries require diverse approaches; and humans are inextricably linked to fisheries, thus effective and enduring solutions must consider human wellbeing and environmental sustainability in tandem. We end with a call to action with explicit roles and responsibilities for different actors inside and outside of the Fishery Improvement Project context to support binding and enforceable agreements between buyers and fishworker representative organizations, advancing human and labor rights protections in seafood supply chains.

Read More

CITATION

Finkbeiner, E. M., Giordano, C., Fitzpatrick, J., Apel, A., Blasco, C., Dalton, K. H., Jerí, J. C., Lopez-Ercilla, I., Lout, G. E., Madden, C., Martinez-Tovar, I., Obregon, P., Anderson, J. T., & Kittinger, J. N. (2024). Insights from a community of practice: Integrating human rights in fisheries improvement. Marine Policy, 163, 106100. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2024.106100