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| | | Role of women |
Maintained by FAO-FI
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| | Gender equality and empowering women | | | The UN is committed to promoting gender equality and women’s empowerment to assure that women and men enjoy the same status and have equal opportunities to realize their full human rights and potential. Gender equality is the equal valuing by society of both the similarities and the differences between women and men and the different roles they play. Targeted measures are often needed to compensate for historical and social disadvantages that prevent women and men from otherwise being equals. These measures may necessitate different treatment of women and men in order to ensure an equal outcome. It is fundamental - and beneficial for all - that women are able to participate in all spheres of life and society.
See More... | | Photo title: Haenyo, or sea women, statue in Jeju, Korea. | | Photo credit: © Chosun Bimbo 2 via Wikimedia Commons. | | | | Women in marine science | | | Marine science is as vast as the ocean, and research on the ocean – that is, oceanography - has united biology, physics, chemistry, ecology, geochemistry, geology, geophysics, computer and electronic engineering, marine instrumentation and other disciplines in investigations of the marine environment. Though women have succeeded in breaking into many previously male-dominated fields in recent years, it is still unusual to find them in marine science and technology careers. The UNESCO-IOC has recently launched a series of articles highlighting the contribution of women to marine science.
See More... | | Photo title: © MOI, Ruby Moothien Pillay and colleagues of the Mauritius Oceanography Institute. | | Photo credit: © MOI | | | | Women in fisheries | | | | Fisheries are essential to the well-being of millions of people in the developing world, supporting the livelihoods of 540 million. Capture fisheries and aquaculture provide direct employment for over 45 million people - add to that the important secondary sectors such as handling and processing and women represent half of those involved.
See More... |  | | Photo title: A woman collects fish and sipu at sunset in the Dili District, Timor-Leste | | Photo credit: UN Photo/Martine Perret | | | | |
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| Heart studies weigh in with a new plug for fish
by David Brown, Washington Post 01 April 2002 | |
| | WASHINGTON Two new studies show that people who eat substantial amounts of oily fish are greatly protected from sudden, unexpected death, a common condition usually caused by severely abnormal heart rhythms..The studies - which both draw their conclusions from long-term observation of tens of thousands of people - greatly bolster the evidence that eating fish regularly can have major health benefits..While most of earlier studies involve only men, one of the new studies demonstrates fish's benefit in women..The benefit for both men and women appears to come mostly from fish's effect on the risk of sudden cardiac death, although in the study involving women fish protected against nonfatal heart attacks, too. | |
Read more at http://www.iht.com/articles/54345.html.
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