Poverty and gender perspectives in marine spatial planning: lessons from Madagascar
Citation and access
Citation and access
Data access level:
Creator/Principal investigator(s):
- Richard Mulwa - University of Nairobi - Faculty of Law and Department of Economics and Development Studies,
- Jane Turpie - University of Cape Town - School of Economics
- Johanna Brühl - University of Nairobi
- Razack Lokina - The University of Dodoma, Tanzania
Research principal:
Data contains personal data:
Yes
Type of personal data:
Age, gender, income, county, village, GPS coordinates.
Sensitive personal data:
Yes
Citation:
Language:
Method and outcome
Method and outcome
Unit of analysis:
Population:
In Madagascar, a total of 490 households were interviewed face-to-face in the north / north western region of Madagascar. Households were sampled from the Bay of Sahamalaza in the Sofia region and the Bay of Mahajamba and Bombetoka in the Boeny region. Household sampling effort per village was guided by information on village populations from census data in each country. At the village level, households were randomly selected with the help of village headmen and given unique serial identifiers.
Time method:
Sampling procedure:
Time period(s) investigated:
Data collection - Interview
Data collection - Interview
Mode of collection:
Interview
Source of the data:
- Events/Interactions
Geographic coverage
Geographic coverage
Geographic location:
Geographic description:
The study area comprised three coastal bays in the north western regions of Boeny and Sofia, namely Bombetoka, Mahajamba and Sahamalaza Bays. The data collection was confined to these bays due to the fact that most of the population is concentrated here and the remainder of the coasts of these two regions is largely inaccessible. Bombetoka, Mahajamba and Sahamalaza Bays are characterised by highly diverse marine ecosys-tems and contain mangrove forests, coral reefs, and seagrass beds. In fact, this stretch of coast, has some of the highest diversity of corals in the WIO region (>300 species). The area around Sahamalaza is also home to some of Madagascar’s largest mangrove forests. A little further off the coast one can find island systems which are volcanic, karst, and coral.
Highest geographic unit:
County (NUTS 3)
