Fish-for-Sex
Cross-source consensus on Fish-for-Sex from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- The fish-for-sex practice, locally termed 'Jaboya', involves the exchange of sex for access to fish. — Climate change, transactional sex, HIV/AIDS and sustainable livelihoods among fishing communities around Lake Victoria: a scoping review protocol
- Female fishmongers increasingly must offer sex to male fishermen in exchange for fish supply as stocks decline and competition intensifies. — Climate change, transactional sex, HIV/AIDS and sustainable livelihoods among fishing communities around Lake Victoria: a scoping review protocol
- Fish-for-sex is structurally driven by gender-unequal power dynamics rather than being a matter of individual choice. — Climate change, transactional sex, HIV/AIDS and sustainable livelihoods among fishing communities around Lake Victoria: a scoping review protocol
- Fish-for-sex distorts fish pricing and reduces income for fishmongers and their dependents. — Climate change, transactional sex, HIV/AIDS and sustainable livelihoods among fishing communities around Lake Victoria: a scoping review protocol
- The practice is simultaneously economically rational as a livelihood strategy and deeply harmful in health terms. — Climate change, transactional sex, HIV/AIDS and sustainable livelihoods among fishing communities around Lake Victoria: a scoping review protocol
- Fish-for-sex reinforces existing structural gender inequalities rather than dissolving them. — Climate change, transactional sex, HIV/AIDS and sustainable livelihoods among fishing communities around Lake Victoria: a scoping review protocol