Marine Resources and Coastal Management
(3 credits/7.5 ECTS)
Course Content
Marine Resources and Coastal Management (MRCM) includes conventional marine activities, such as fisheries and shipping, but also nature reserves and tourism, mining, and the development of aquaculture and offshore renewable energy sources. The intensity of marine resources and coastal uses causes enhanced needs to understand and coordinate spatial and temporal relationships between ecological and economic dimensions of MRCM. This course introduces fundamental concepts in oceanography and marine ecology. Students will be trained to identify and map potential marine resources and their development dynamics. The course explores various management models, and students learn to include carrying capacity analyses in business models. We also present and discuss case studies of governance and conflicts in the use of marine and coastal resources in ASEAN.
Learning Objectives
After completing the course, the student should be able to:
Identify and map potential ocean and coastal resources
Understand physical and socio-political factors in resource use dynamics (e.g. tides and waves, erosion and tsunamis; profit interests and government regulations)
Critically utilize available tools to assess economic resource values and ecological vulnerability
Understand and utilize ecological balance and carrying capacity analyses, such as EIA (environmental impact assessment) and SEA (strategic environmental assessment)
Critically assess strengths and weaknesses of various policy and regulatory frameworks
Books and Reading Material
Green, D. R., & Payne, J. L. (2017) Marine and Coastal Resource Management: Principles and Practice. Routledge.
Relevant and recently published journal articles.
Course Coordinator
Muh Aris Marfa’i, Professor (Universitas Gadjah Mada)
Halvor Knutsen, Professor (University of Agder)