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Seaweed is Sexy : The consumption and utilisation of seaweed throughout British history and the marketing that surrounds itRees, Rhianna January 2019 (has links)
Damp, rotting, smelly, rising from the depths, washed up on shorelines. Seaweed (or Macroalgae) has transitioned over time in its position and uses within the British Isles; as discussed in the thesis it has undergone an evolution from its historical use as a source of food in times of desperation, to the superfood it is lauded as today. Other applications, from medicinal to agricultural, have contributed to a narrative of seaweed’s identity over the centuries, to the appeal of seaweed as a food source in the present day. There is an increased interest in seaweed, especially for culinary purposes, in the British Isles. Research by chefs, cookbooks and innovative product ranges also frame the current attitudes in the use of seaweed in common everyday foods. The case study shows the challenges and opportunities in the current revitalised seaweed market, identifying marketing analysis approaches useful for changing the attitudes toward seaweed in the British Isles. Based on interviews with companies marketing seaweed, and a focus on Seagreens®, I draw on advertising theory and consultancy tools (such as SWOT, AGCC, ELM and DAGMAR) to analyse the current seaweed market defining what I call a ‘consumer triad’ of potential consumers. Findings indicate many possibilities for future USP endorsements depending on the target market, from health-orientated to sustainably farmed. Seaweed interest appears to be more knowledge than consumer driven, so the question instead surrounds the prospect of knowledge sharing in an integrated online manner. Meanwhile, challenges in farming, labelling and conservation within the EU hamper advancements in the field, with the balance shifting to invested interest in Blue Economy models and IMTA systems.
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Changing Tides and Navigating Uncertainty : An ethnographic study of NGO resilience in coastal South IndiaBerglund, Emma January 2023 (has links)
What makes an non-governmental organisation (NGO) agile and resilient towards changes, pressures or uncertainties at community, state or macro-political level? By adopting a single case study based on semi-structured interviews and fieldwork, this thesis will dive into the life-world of a community-based NGO based in Nagapattinam, Tamil Nadu. Social Needs Education and Human Awareness (SNEHA) has since founding in the 1980s had a strong rights-based identity and evolved through various phases of community organising, disaster relief work, evidence-based advocacy and upholding of fisher communities traditional and customary rights. Throughout its evolution, it has faced several challenges and pressures threatening the stability of the organisation and community, including the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami. By combining a theoretical base of actor-network and social interface theory, this thesis argues that a broader, more comprehensive understanding of organisational and community resilience can be achieved. Seven factors have been identified as particularly contributing to organisations resilience and stability, mainly associated with having clear organisational identity, loyal staff, and a combination of centralised and decentralised structures. This thesis contributes to the understanding of resilience of community-based NGOs, contextualising their challenges within broader networks and advocating for donor support that aligns with local knowledge and organisational development in an increasingly complex context along the Indian coastline.
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Between altruism and self-interest: Beyond EU’s normative power. An analysis of EU’s engagement in sustainable ocean governanceKuznia, Aleksandra January 2019 (has links)
With the majority of the oceans lying outside the borders of national jurisdiction, it is not easy to preserve them healthy and secure as the ‘shared responsibility’ is not recognized unambiguously in the global world. The recent turn to the maritime sphere is visible in the UN 2030 Agenda on Sustainable Development that has been widely advocated by the EU. The latter’s commitment to sustainable ocean governance involves action beyond borders, which has a considerable impact on the global maritime sphere as well as on developing countries depending on the seas. On the one hand, the EU’s pursuit of sustainable ocean governance is informed by the norms and values that the organization possesses and tries to promote in its response to global challenges. On the other, the normative principles and the EU’s flowery rhetoric serve as a mean to rationalize Union’s pursuit of self-interest. This study analyses both dimensions of the organization’s engagement in the maritime sphere, considering oceans as a ‘placeful’ environment that has to be treated in the same way as the land is. By exploring the external dimension of EU’s action in the field, the thesis allows to see that EU’s pursuit of sustainable ocean governance has to be understood as a process in which the strategic aims are imbued with genuine moral concerns. Nevertheless, those can sometimes be undermined by the material policy outcomes visible in the West African coastal states such as Mauritania and Senegal.
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Surrender to Dagaa : An ethnographic study of Fishing in ZanzibarTrägårdh, Björn January 2023 (has links)
This thesis explores Zanzibari fishing practices and the fishermen’s relation to the ocean, within the context of the global political economy. The study focuses on catching small pelagic fish, locally known as dagaa, which has become vital for food security in Zanzibar. By combining anthropological theories of phenomenology and political economy, the thesis identifies capitalism and the need for cash as constituting a metabolic rift that alienates fishermen from the ocean, where the ocean is seen as more of an industrial landscape to earn a wage rather than a landscape to dwell with. The thesis further expands the analysis to discuss overexploitation in relation to the global economy with a worldview of unlimited goods.
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[en] BNDES FUNDING FOR BRAZILIAN MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING AND POSSIBLE IMPACTS ON COMBATING PLASTIC POLLUTION / [pt] O FINANCIAMENTO DO BNDES AO PLANEJAMENTO ESPACIAL MARINHO BRASILEIRO E POSSÍVEIS IMPACTOS NO COMBATE À POLUIÇÃO PLÁSTICAPAULA BAGRICHEVSKY DE SOUZA 17 October 2023 (has links)
[pt] O oceano é um ecossistema fundamental para a sobrevivência dos humanos
e não humanos. Todavia, vem sendo explorado de forma desordenada e sufocado
com poluição plástica, como demonstram diagnósticos recentes, elaborados na
Década do Oceano, inclusive em relação ao cenário brasileiro. Nesse período,
pretende-se alavancar ações para alcançar um oceano saudável e produtivo, entre
outros atributos, mediante integração e colaboração entre diversos atores, inclusive
as instituições financeiras, que dispõem de recursos para financiar sua execução. O
presente trabalho objetiva demonstrar como o Planejamento Espacial Marinho, cujo
estudo para implementação do Projeto-Piloto na região sul do país será apoiado
pelo Banco Nacional de Desenvolvimento Econômico e Social (BNDES), poderá,
além de servir de base para a adequada regulação do uso sustentável do oceano,
também acelerar o combate à poluição plástica nesse ecossistema, induzindo a
ampliação de ações voltadas à gestão de resíduos sólidos, nele planejadas. Esse
efeito adicional poderá ser alcançado porque esse planejamento será desenvolvido
com base ecossistêmica e observando a integração entre as políticas públicas
marinhas e terrestres já existentes, além de considerar todas as questões que afetam
o oceano. A Convenção das Nações Unidas sobre Diversidade Biológica definiu a
base ecossistêmica como uma estratégia para a gestão integrada da terra, da água e
dos recursos vivos, que promove a conservação e o uso sustentável, de um modo
equitativo. No âmbito do referido financiamento, deverão ser produzidos cadernos
técnicos setoriais, entre os quais sobre meio ambiente e mudança do clima,
analisando, inclusive, a poluição marinha e como esse problema ambiental e social
pode afetar o uso econômico do oceano. Assim, aliando essa iniciativa a outras que
já são apoiadas, em linha com sua missão socioambiental, o BNDES irá induzir
transformações relevantes, ao colaborar para a efetividade da Política Nacional de
Resíduos Sólidos, necessária para o desenvolvimento da Economia Azul e a
consequente sustentabilidade do oceano. / [en] The ocean is a fundamental ecosystem for the survival of humans and non-humans. However, it has been exploited in a disorderly way and suffocated with
plastic pollution, as shown by recent diagnoses, elaborated in the Ocean Decade,
including in relation to the Brazilian scenario. During this period, the intention is to
leverage actions to achieve a healthy and productive ocean, among other attributes,
through integration and collaboration between different actors, including financial
institutions, which have resources to finance its execution. This work aims to
demonstrate how the Marine Spatial Planning, whose study for the implementation
of the Pilot Project in the southern region of the country will be supported by the
National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES), may, in addition
to providing for the regulation of ocean use, also accelerate the combat against
plastic pollution in this ecosystem, inducing the expansion of actions aimed at solid
waste management in Brazil. This additional effect can be achieved because this
planning will be developed based on ecosystem and observing the integration
between existing marine and terrestrial public policies, in addition to considering
all issues that affect the ocean. The United Nations Convention on Biological
Diversity defined the ecosystem base as a strategy for the integrated management
of land, water and living resources that promotes conservation and sustainable use
in an equitable way. In this financing, should be produced a sectoral notebook about
the environmental and climate change, including analyzing marine pollution and
how this environmental and social problem can affect the economic use of the
ocean. Thus, combining this initiative with others that are already supported, in line
with its socio-environmental mission, the BNDES will induce relevant
transformations, by collaborating for the effectiveness of the National Solid Waste
Policy, necessary for the development of the Blue Economy and the consequent
sustainability of the ocean.
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La politique extérieure de l'Inde en Afrique / The Indian foreign policy in AfricaMonnet, Rodolphe 12 June 2018 (has links)
Depuis 2001 et la recomposition des équilibres de puissance, l'Inde s'affirme comme l'un des acteurs qui compte dans un espace international de plus en plus multipolaire. Les mouvements de fond actuels provoquent une redistribution de cette puissance imposant de nouvelles alliances et de nouveaux jeux de pouvoirs. L'Inde n'est pas étrangère à cette tendance et encore plus depuis l'arrivée au pouvoir, en 2014, de l'actuel Premier ministre, Narendra Modi. Ce dernier conduit une politique extérieure ambitieuse pour que son pays accède à un statut de puissance mondiale. C'est dans ce cadre que se pose notre problématique qui est de savoir dans quelle mesure la place de l'Afrique dans la politique étrangère indienne permet-elle justement à l'Inde de parvenir à se hisser à ce statut de puissance. Pour y répondre, cette thèse investigue trois directions. D'abord, la place de l'océan Indien dans la relation indo-africaine doit rendre compte du rôle de l'Afrique dans la volonté indienne de faire de cet océan un espace pacifique et sécurisé sur lequel l'Inde puisse être un acteur incontournable face à des acteurs politiques puissants et hétérogènes. Ensuite, cette thèse s'attache à déterminer le rôle que l'Afrique joue dans la volonté de l'Inde d'être une puissance ayant une capacité d'influence politique sur la scène internationale au travers des instances internationales, de ses relations bilatérales avec les États africains et de la diaspora indienne installée dans ces pays. Enfin, cette recherche de statut passe par le champ économique et la nécessaire évaluation de l'empreinte économique que l'Inde souhaite imprimer en Afrique pour mieux asseoir ses capacités d'influence. Cette étude doit permettre de donner un éclairage sur la politique extérieure indienne à l'heure où les États-Unis réévaluent leur implication dans l'océan Indien, où la Chine met en place la « One Belt, One Road » et où l'Inde et le Japon viennent de s'unir pour proposer un nouveau partenariat à l'Afrique. / Since 2001 and the reshuffling of the balance of power, India has become one of the influential actors in an increasingly multipolar international context. The current groundswells are reshuffling powers between Nations in shaping new alliances and new power games. India is, more than ever, involved in this trend since the current Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, came to power in 2014. He conducts an ambitious foreign policy as a means to make his country a global and respected power. The context of the issue detailed in this document is: to what extent does Africa's place in India's foreign policy enables India to reach this status of power? This thesis investigates the following three themes: Firstly, the Indian Ocean's place in the Indo-African relationship should reflect Africa's role in India's will to make the Indian Ocean region a peaceful and secured space in which India is a decisive player in front of powerful and heterogeneous political actors. Secondly, this thesis focuses on assessing Africa's role in India's initiatives to be an influential player on politics on the international agenda through international bodies, its bilateral relations with African states and the Indian diaspora settled down in these countries. Thirdly, India's search for that particular status goes through the economic area and the assessment of India's economic footprint in Africa to better establish its influence on that Continent. This study tries to shed the light on India's foreign policy while the United States are reassessing their involvement in the Indian Ocean, and while China is setting up its "One Belt, One Road" and India and Japan have just come together to propose a new partnership to Africa.
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