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Photo: M. Troell
Goastal and marine systems
This theme actively addresses social-ecological dynamics in marine and coastal systems, and studies the transitions towards an ecosystem approach and other means to address the global marine challenge.
Areas of focus include the dynamics of ecological feedbacks and regime shifts, and the capacity of society and managing institutions to address such complex ecosystem changes.

Researchers within the theme are studying tropical and temperate systems, involving research on coral reefs, sea-grass beds, fisheries, aquaculture, food webs and eutrophication. as well as implications from global trade dynamics for marine and coastal  management.

Methods include ecological and social field studies (inventories, interviews), ecosystem modeling, meta-analysis, and theoretical development. The theme host researchers from a range of disciplines (ecology, political science, economics, sociology, law) and collaborate with a range of international research institutions.

Theme members are also active in policy dialogues with stakeholders concerned with marine governance issues.

Click here to see all theme-related publications

New project: Ecosystem-based and integrated coastal zone management - challenges and possibilities

Governance of coastal and marine systems news
Research news | 2012-04-27
New research looks at how to unlock feedbacks that keep marine ecosystems in undesired states.
Research news | 2012-03-23
New programme to coordinate international research on social-ecological systems.
Research news | 2012-03-19
Why management at community level can dramatically curb overfishing and benefit local resource users.
Research news | 2012-03-02
Film project documents how people along the Chao Pharaya river in Thailand deal with floods.
Research news | 2012-02-09
Why fishermen keep fishing despite dwindling catches.
Research news | 2012-01-30
Quality food more important than quantity for seabirds in the Baltic.
Research news | 2011-12-22
Successful seabird breeding depends on access to one third of the world's fish.
Research news | 2011-12-16
Difficult trade-off between parrotfish trade and protecting crucial ecological functions.
Research news | 2011-12-01
New study identifies fishery communities most vulnerable to climate change and what actions to take.
Research news | 2011-11-08
Sea cucumber farming has potential but caution is advised, says research.
Learn more
Theme contact
Centre researcher Max Troell
2010-12-01 | Sturle Hauge Simonsen
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Stockholm Resilience Centre
Stockholm University, Kräftriket 2B | Phone: +46 8 674 70 70 | E-mail: info@stockholmresilience.su.se