
Dr Matt Fortnam
@mattfortnam
Researcher at University of Exeter and Centre for Humanitarian Change. Resilience, Marine Sustainability and Development. Project @SMMR @ROCC_research
ID: 1054986463
02-01-2013 12:28:18
426 Tweet
273 Followers
358 Following

New participatory tool for assessing the acceptability of trade-offs from marine planning interventions. Developed during Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) Blue Communities in South East Asia context, and now being taken forward in SMMR ROCC

How may plural frames of human-nature relationships matter in co-production of knowledge for transformative change? Do you have thoughts, ideas, interest and experience? Do your PhD with me! @FNPWUR in collaboration with Stockholm Resilience Centre wur.nl/nl/vacature/Ph…



Great to see ExeterGeography colleague Saffron speaking about heatwave risks on BBC News (UK) today

Great to see this pre-proof paper by #ReccaSajorne et al. Thank you for the opportunity to contribute to this output for Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) Blue Communities



📢Now only one week left to apply for the 2nd round of #funded #PhD projects with CDT SuMMeR - hear @louisa_evans talk about what #interdisciplinary research is about and how this approach will find solutions for #sustainable #MarineManagement ...

Our new paper concludes #marineconservation development needs to be more systematic in identifying #tradeoffs from programs and transparently deliberate which trade-offs are acceptable to improve equity and #bluejustice doi.org/10.1002/pan3.1… Blue Communities @ExeterMarine




The Wildlife Trusts CEO Craig Bennett lays out 5 reasons why the government’s backtracking on waterways protection is so terrible. First on his list is a recurring theme theme for this gov that I think we all need to be protesting about much more loudly: DISHONESTY


Tonight on South Today BBC Hampshire & Isle of Wight hundreds of thousands of litres of untreated wastewater and sewerage pouring in to the Beaulieu River (again) . It’s the New Forest NPA and one of the most environmentally protected rivers in the UK and it’s full of . . .



New research alert!📢 Did you know that #shipwrecks are important for marine life in areas of high #fishing pressure? The new study from University of Plymouth and Blue Marine is one of the first known studies to evidence the ecological value of shipwrecks. Read the #OpenAccess paper by

Our article in The Marine Biologist magazine MBA - Marine Biological Association: A sustainable, #equitable, and inclusive #ocean economy for coastal communities mymba.mba.ac.uk/resource/a-sus…



Two exciting Research Fellow opportunities to undertake high-impact, action research on health system resilience to climate change in Kenya. You will work at Centre for Humanitarian Change in Nairobi (Kenya) and collaborate University of Exeter 6 Jan deadline: lnkd.in/eE49QSCf.
