This Evaluation carried out in April-May 2009 was commissioned by WWF in Namibia to assess and review the relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, impact and sustainability of the project. The aims of the project were: Project Goal: The shared Zambezi/Chobe River fisheries resources managed sustainably, and Project Purpose: Alternative community fishery management practices piloted and tested contributing to a fully integrated management system for fisheries that provides optimal benefits to all stakeholders. The project has elucidated the ecology of the fishes and the complexity of the fishery of the Zambezi-Chobe system. The biological research and market surveys have developed an understanding of the subsistence and commercial fisheries of the system. The project is therefore able to provide good management guidelines and the framework for a local adaptive management approach to accommodate the dynamic river-floodplain system. The project has successfully supported the promotion of low-input community-based aquaculture in pans, while more formal, higher-input fish farming has been shown to be impractical and not economically viable in the low-gradient, flood-susceptible Caprivi area. The project has carried out a thorough review of the Fisheries Act and Regulations. Emphasis has been placed on the formation of Community Fisheries Committees. The next step is to assist community fisheries committees and their members to establish local management plans that include fisheries reserves. While the project has succeeding in sensitising the fishing communities, implementing community management plans has not yet been achieved.