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Main Authors: Fraile, Pablo, Prados, María-José, Del Valle, Carolina, Suárez, Juan Luis, Kontopoulos, Christos, Charalampopoulou, Betty
Format: Recurso digital
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Published: Zenodo 2025
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15512617
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author Fraile, Pablo
Prados, María-José
Del Valle, Carolina
Suárez, Juan Luis
Kontopoulos, Christos
Charalampopoulou, Betty
author_facet Fraile, Pablo
Prados, María-José
Del Valle, Carolina
Suárez, Juan Luis
Kontopoulos, Christos
Charalampopoulou, Betty
contents <p>Coastal regions are often characterised by strategic socio-economic assets. This makes coasts<br>particularly sensitive to Climate Change (CC) impacts, which primarily expose infrastructure and local<br>population. Human activities are also responsible for additional pressures on coastal ecosystems, often<br>aggravating vulnerabilities from CC. Coastal area adaptation strategies should be iterative and dynamic, due<br>to the evolving dynamics of coastal territorial systems.<br>It is argued that governing Land-Sea Interactions (LSI) and the coastal zones is particularly prone to<br>problems of observation (between land and sea, between the centre and coastal margin) and complex interdependencies<br>(between social and ecological systems, between actors managing risk) at different levels<br>(landscape, regime, and niche). Governing LSI requires a multi-actor and multi-level perspective applied as<br>methodological frameworks to governance and new forms of policy integration. Therefore, the growth of the<br>pressures induced on the global marine environment urgently requires more sustainable coastal and<br>maritime management.<br>OCEANIDS is a HORIZON-MISS-CLIMA project. Its aims is building user-driven applications and tools, to<br>achieve a more resilient and inclusive systemic pathway to a Blue Economy in coastal regions. The project<br>has a strong focus on behavioral change, both on individual as well as on a systemic level, enabling<br>participating regions and communities to better understand and use potential social tipping points and<br>systemic leverage points to accelerate transformative changes towards climate resilience.</p>
format Recurso digital
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institution Zenodo
language
publishDate 2025
publisher Zenodo
record_format zenodo
spellingShingle Resilience and inclusive pathways to a blue economy in coastal regions
Fraile, Pablo
Prados, María-José
Del Valle, Carolina
Suárez, Juan Luis
Kontopoulos, Christos
Charalampopoulou, Betty
<p>Coastal regions are often characterised by strategic socio-economic assets. This makes coasts<br>particularly sensitive to Climate Change (CC) impacts, which primarily expose infrastructure and local<br>population. Human activities are also responsible for additional pressures on coastal ecosystems, often<br>aggravating vulnerabilities from CC. Coastal area adaptation strategies should be iterative and dynamic, due<br>to the evolving dynamics of coastal territorial systems.<br>It is argued that governing Land-Sea Interactions (LSI) and the coastal zones is particularly prone to<br>problems of observation (between land and sea, between the centre and coastal margin) and complex interdependencies<br>(between social and ecological systems, between actors managing risk) at different levels<br>(landscape, regime, and niche). Governing LSI requires a multi-actor and multi-level perspective applied as<br>methodological frameworks to governance and new forms of policy integration. Therefore, the growth of the<br>pressures induced on the global marine environment urgently requires more sustainable coastal and<br>maritime management.<br>OCEANIDS is a HORIZON-MISS-CLIMA project. Its aims is building user-driven applications and tools, to<br>achieve a more resilient and inclusive systemic pathway to a Blue Economy in coastal regions. The project<br>has a strong focus on behavioral change, both on individual as well as on a systemic level, enabling<br>participating regions and communities to better understand and use potential social tipping points and<br>systemic leverage points to accelerate transformative changes towards climate resilience.</p>
title Resilience and inclusive pathways to a blue economy in coastal regions
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15512617