The Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Research (ZMT) coordinates the European funded COST Action OceanGov (Ocean Governance for Sustainability – Challenges, Options and the Role of Science), chaired by Anna-Katharina Hornidge.
During the 4-year term of the project, ZMT brings together scientists, policy-makers and civil society representatives from 29 COST Member States to create and coordinate a research network for inter- and transdisciplinary research on ocean governance in the EU.
Thematically the network concentrates on the following six governance challenges:
Land-Sea Interactions
Area-Based Management
Seabed Resource Management
Nutrition Security and Food Systems
Ocean, Climate Change, and Acidification
Fisheries Governance
Within these six fields existing scientific research on different scale levels, regions and sustainability challenges is systematical being brought together and prepared in the form of integrated advice on governance tools and mechanisms to improve ocean related decision-making.
This is an international researcher-practitioner collaboration to co-produce a conceptualisation of marine identity.
The collaboration aims, via workshops, shared writing tasks, and networking platforms, to co-produce an academic paper for publication on the nature and types of marine identities.
What does it mean to identify with the marine? Are there universal aspects to this? To what extent does it affect the relationship between humans, other humans, and the coast? The paper will engage with such questions and this collaboration will aim to create space for follow on work and opportunities in developing knowledge in this space.