Research project

Global comparative assessment of the role of oceans in a sustainable future

Project overview

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In this project, an international and multi-disciplinary team will carry out a global comparative assessment of the role of oceans in the transition to a sustainable future. We will use a process of co-creation to develop methodologies to identify regional specificities, constraints and drivers regarding:

  • opportunities presented by oceans to address climate change and build a sustainable future
  • barriers to taking on those opportunities
  • consequences of mismanaging the opportunity or inaction
  • levers for change

 

As articulated by the United Nations “Climate change is affecting every country on every continent. It is disrupting national economies and affecting lives. Weather patterns are changing, sea levels are rising, and weather events are becoming more extreme.

“As countries move toward rebuilding their economies after COVID-19, recovery plans can shape the 21st century economy in ways that are clean, green, healthy, safe and more resilient. The current crisis is an opportunity for a profound, systemic shift to a more sustainable economy that works for both people and the planet.”

In parallel, 2021 – 2030 is the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development is a once in a lifetime opportunity for the global community to come together, collaborate, share knowledge, develop capability, and shape policy to ensure oceans are sustainably managed globally. As articulated by the United Nations “The Decade will be designed to facilitate global communication and mutual learning across research and stakeholder communities. It will work to meet the needs of scientists, policy makers, industry, civil society and the wider public, but it will also support new, collaborative partnerships that can deliver more effective science-based management of our ocean space and resources.”

“The Decade will provide a common framework to ensure that ocean science can fully support countries’ actions to sustainably manage the Oceans and more particularly to achieve the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.”

It is critically important that we use our expertise as scholars and connectivity as a global community, alongside the current and unprecedented investment in economies globally, to inform policy and shape investments to work towards (not away from) the targets set out in the Paris Agreement.

Work for this project will be concentrated in the 8 partner universities, based in 8 countries, although the extent of the research will address the wider regional areas of the Americas, Europe, Africa, Asia and Oceania. 

 

Key outcomes:

  • Creation of a global community of ocean custodians and network for knowledge sharing to enable oceans to play their role in our sustainable future.
  • Greater understanding of the regional specificities of ocean resources, access to solutions to sustainably and responsibly harvest those resources, drivers and constraints for current and future interactions with the oceans, and the threats and impact of inaction.
Outcomes will contribute to the UN Decade of Ocean Science.
 
 

Who’s Involved?

Project team

 

  • Prof. Susan Gourvenec, University of Southampton, UK
  • Prof. Fraser Sturt, University of Southampton, UK
  • Prof. Emily Reid, University of Southampton, UK
  • Dr Robert Holland, University of Southampton, UK
  • Dr Rebecca Sykes, University of Southampton, UK
  • Dr Stephanie Jones, University of Southampton, UK
  • Dr Jared Charles, University of Southampton, UK
  • Dr Joanna Siekiera, University of Bergen, Norway
  • Dr Mialy Andriamahefazafy, University of Portsmouth, UK
  • Prof. Erika Techera, University of Western Australia, Australia
  • Dr Abbie Rogers, University of Western Australia, Australia
  • Prof. Andreas Neef, University of Auckland, New Zealand
  • Dr Kelly Ortega Cisneros, University of Cape Town, South Africa
  • Dr Devine Fuh, University of Cape Town, South Africa
  • Asst Prof Laura Falkenberg, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
  • Prof. Ryan Li, University of Alberta, Canada
  • Dr. Viviene Westbrook, KIMEP University, Kazakhstan

 

Read about this project and other WUN research:
Global comparative assessment of the role of oceans in a sustainable future

Staff

Lead researchers

Other researchers

Professor Fraser Sturt

Director of SMMI
Research interests
  • Maritime Archaeology
  • Geomatics
  • Evaluation methods
Connect with Fraser

Professor Emily Reid

Professor of Intl Economic Law & Sus Dev
Research interests
  • International Economic Law
  • Trade and Sustainability
Connect with Emily

Dr Robert Holland

Lecturer in Natural Sciences
Connect with Robert

Professor Stephanie Jones

Professor of Literature and Law
Research interests
  • Literature and Law
  • Postcolonial and decolonial studies
  • Marine and maritime literatures
Connect with Stephanie

Collaborating research institutes, centres and groups

Research outputs