Conservation

A market for 30x30 in the ocean

Integrating climate adaptation and transboundary management: Guidelines for designing climate-smart marine protected areas

Biomass accrual benefits of community-based marine protected areas outweigh their operational costs

Whales in the carbon cycle: can recovery remove carbon dioxide?

Two Decades of Community-Based Marine Conservation Provide the Foundations for Future Action

Paying for conservation

Marine conservation can be costly. Sometimes, the costs are so high that even committed actors may miss the opportunity to engage in it. While technological can help reduce costs, there is an opportunity to leverage policies to re-shape human incentives: make conservation not only affordable, but perhaps even profitable. These line of research explores different ways in which modest changes to our current approach to marine conservation can result in large gains.

Distributional effects of conservation

Interactions between biodiversity and economic use of the oceans

Self-financed marine protected areas

Mapping global inputs and impacts from human sewage in coastal ecosystems

Asymmetry across international borders: Research, fishery and management trends and economic value of the giant sea bass (_Stereolepis gigas_)