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FRAME: Introductory video for the Small Fish Seminar: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCCUj0BTbBw. The short video features comments from our colleagues Maarten Bavinck, Jeppe Kolding, Joeri Scholtens, Shakuntala Thilsted, Derek Johnson, Benjamin Campion, Holly Hapke, Kyana Dipananda, Amalendu Jyotishi, and Molly Ahern.

Despite its evident importance, and the challenges that it faces, the diverse and complex economy that produces and distributes dried fish has been almost invisible to researchers and policymakers. The fisheries literature tends to emphasize fish, fishers, and fishing, paying far less attention to land-based activities such as processing and trading, which may account for half or more of fisheries related livelihoods, including those of most of the women involved (Weeratunge et al. 2010) [1]. Fresh products are often assumed to be the primary, or only, form in which fish is consumed. Postharvest dried fish value chains are often overlooked, and undocumented in official statistics [2].

THUMBNAIL: Introductory video for the Small Fish Seminar: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCCUj0BTbBw. The short video features comments from our colleagues Maarten Bavinck, Jeppe Kolding, Joeri Scholtens, Shakuntala Thilsted, Derek Johnson, Benjamin Campion, Holly Hapke, Kyana Dipananda, Amalendu Jyotishi, and Molly Ahern.

Try to Hover over me Tooltip text This webinar, hosted by the Dried Fish Matters project (DFM), was presented by Gayathri Lokuge from the Centre for Poverty Analysis (CEPA) in Sri Lanka. and see if it works! (This is text pasted as HTML into the source editor box.)