Project details
Research Outcomes
About the research project
About the research
Researchers are:
- Executing transdisciplinary research and working with coastal communities to creatively design, regenerate and adapt ocean and coastal industry/community infrastructures in preparation for future environmental and social change
- Focusing on co-designing infrastructures with the potential to enhance equity, diversity, and inclusion
- Looking for innovative infrastructure designs that support sustainability and improved safety
- Creating opportunities for communities and industries to explore ocean and coastal change challenges and to engage with infrastructure design processes, including with Indigenous groups, different genders, youth, seniors, people with disabilities, and rural and urban dwellers
Research Team
To achieve its objectives, FOCI’s co-principal investigators Dr. Paul Foley (Memorial University, Environmental Policy Institute, Grenfell Campus) and Dr. Lorenzo Moro (Memorial University, Department of Ocean and Naval Architectural Engineering) have engaged a team of 65 researchers and collaborators from 34 engineering, natural science, social science, and artistic disciplines, 18 institutions, and 88 local, regional, national, and international partners and collaborators from Indigenous communities, industry, government, and civil society.
FOCI is achieving its objectives by carrying out a rich program of research, training, and engagement organized into nine Work Packages (WPs), each clustered under one of the three core themes of sustainability, safety, and inclusion. Four additional integration work packages (IWPs) play a key role in integrating findings across work packages and supporting wider and deeper public engagement.
Sustainability Work Packages
Ensuring infrastructure designs contribute to full spectrum sustainability for coastal communities
In a context of rapid climate, ocean, and social-ecological change, a key challenge is to learn from different coastal communities, from groups of rights holders and stakeholders, from citizens, and to support the development of their capacity in strengthening and designing infrastructures for navigating through change. Sustainability Work Packages are based on principles of co-producing knowledge, with aims to learn from and support peoples of Atlantic Canada in creating sustainable coastal infrastructures. These WPs are working with Indigenous groups, industry organizations, and governance actors to strengthen, develop, and design coastal community infrastructure that can better navigate future change.
- First Nations Data Sovereignty and Infrastructures for Atlantic AAROMs (WP Leads: Dr. Max Liboiron, Memorial University, Department of Geography and Ken Paul, Wolastoqey Nation in New Brunswick)
- Building collaborative interdisciplinary research infrastructure in Atlantic Canada’s lobster fisheries (WP Lead: Dr. Paul Foley, Memorial University, Environmental Policy Institute, Grenfell Campus)
- Perceptions of climate change and social futures (WP Leads: Dr. Howard Ramos, Western University, Department of Sociology and Dr. Karen Foster Dalhousie University, Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology)
Safety Work Packages
Designing safer maritime and coastal infrastructures for Atlantic Canada
Safety Work Packages are addressing critical needs for proactively designing maritime and coastal infrastructure for Atlantic Canadian industries, coastal communities, and workers that is both safer and less environmentally damaging. Maritime work is among the most hazardous in the world. Climate, ocean, coastal, and industrial change will create unique challenges for the health and safety of seafarers, fish harvesters, and workers in coastal ports and facilities such as aquaculture, including for those commuting to and from remote locations. These challenges need to be addressed while simultaneously reducing the environmental hazards associated with these infrastructures.
- Improving safety and reducing the environmental footprint of marine vehicles by design and operation (WP Lead: Dr. Lorenzo Moro, Memorial University, Department of Ocean and Naval Architectural Engineering)
- Acting on weather & climate: networks and infrastructure for adaptation/mitigation decision making (WP Lead: Dr. Joel Finnis, Memorial University, Department of Geography)
- Search and rescue in remote regions (WP Lead: Dr. Robert Brown, Memorial University, Marine Institute)
Inclusion Work Packages
Helping to ensure infrastructure designs support inclusion, social justice, and equity
Ocean and coastal environmental degradation and change, unsafe and unsustainable resource development, and coastal community restructuring can exacerbate exclusion from ecosystem benefits, social injustice, and inequities. These problems often result in disproportionate impacts on disadvantaged groups such as people from lower socioeconomic standards, women, youth, immigrants, injured workers, people with disabilities, and resource-dependent coastal communities, with few economic development alternatives. By directly engaging multiple, critical understandings of inclusion and its relationship to social justice and equity, Inclusion Work Packages are developing new knowledge that can improve conditions for equitably engaging and including diverse groups (different genders, old and young, immigrants) to support their capacity and resilience in contexts of ocean, coastal, and social-ecological change.
- Building resilient coastal communities through social and community enterprise (WP Lead: Dr. Natalie Slawinski, Memorial University, Faculty of Business Administration)
- Return to work after work injury or illness: challenges for marine and coastal workers in Atlantic Canada (WP Lead: Dr. Kim Cullen, Memorial University, School of Human Kinetics and Recreation)
- Inclusion, social justice and equity in urban and rural coastal communities (WP Lead: Dr. Nicole Power, Memorial University, Department of Sociology)
Integration Work Packages
Supporting integration and knowledge mobilization
Although each WP identifies links with other WPs, four additional projects are working to strengthen, consolidate and optimize FOCI integration. Each of these integration work package (IWP) projects are undertaking activities to coordinate elements of FOCI WPs, ensuring integration of overarching FOCI objectives and research questions into WP research designs, and to coordinate and synthesize knowledge mobilization outputs identifying infrastructure designs that can enhance the capacity of ocean industries and coastal communities to safely, sustainably, and inclusively navigate climate, ocean and social-ecological change.
- Leveraging Existing Communities of Practice for FOCI Outreach & Dissemination (WP Leads: Dr. Joel Finnis, Memorial University, Department of Geography)
- Sustainable Coastal Atlantic Canada Dialogues (WP Lead: Dr. Mark Stoddart, Memorial University, Department of Sociology)
- Artistic infrastructure for navigating ocean and coastal community change (WP Lead: Dr. Barbara Neis, Memorial University, Department of Sociology)
- Foresighting sustainable coastal community infrastructures (WP Leads: Dr. Robert Stephenson, Fisheries and Oceans Canada and University of New Brunswick, Department of Biology and Dr. Paul Foley, Memorial University, Environmental Policy Institute, Grenfell Campus)
Partners
- Memorial University
- Dalhousie University
- American Bureau of Shipping
- Anqotum Resource Management
- Association for New Canadians
- Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency
- Atlantic Policy Congress of First Nations Chiefs Secretariat
- Bonavista Historic Townscape Foundation
- Bonne Bay Cottage Hospital Heritage Corporation
- Cambridge Centre for Social Innovation, University of Cambridge
- Centre for Local Prosperity
- Centre for Marine Socioecology
- Centre for Research on Work Disability Policy
- Choices for Youth
- City of Corner Brook
- City of St. John's, Public Work
- Coast and Ocean Risk Communication Community of Practice
- Collaborative Centre for Coastal Studies, University of New Brunswick
- Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization
- Conservation Corps Newfoundland and Labrador
- Corner Brook Investments Limited Partnership
- Department of Industrial Engineering, Dalhousie University
- Ecology Action Centre
- Environment and Climate Change Canada
- Environmental Policy Group, Wageningen University & Research
- Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science, Memorial University
- Faculty of Science and Technology, UiT - The Arctic University of Norway
- Fishing for Success
- FRAMSynt
- Gespe'gewaq Mi'gmaq Resource Council
- Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, Department of Children, Seniors and Social Development,Disability Policy Office
- Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, Department of Industry, Energy and Technology
- Happy Valley Goose Bay Housing and Homelessness Coalition
- The Harris Centre
- Homarus Inc.
- Inspiring Communities
- JASCO Applied Sciences
- Lobster Node Inc.
- Maersk Supply Services
- MaliseetNation Conservation Council
- Manuels River Natural Heritage Society Inc.
- McGill, Sustainable Canada Dialogues
- Mi'kmaq Alsumk Mowimsikik Koqoey Association
- Mi’kmaq Confederacy of Prince Edward Island, Integrated Resource Management Directorate
- Morag Loves Company
- MUN Active Site Project
- MUN Bonne Bay Marine Station
- MUN Botanical Garden
- MUN Center for Social Enterprise
- MUN Environmental Policy Institute
- MUN John Paton Lewis funds
- MUN Marketing and Communication, Grenfell Campus
- MUN Office of the Associate Vice-President (Grenfell Campus) Research and Graduate Studies
- MUN School of Fine Arts, Grenfell Campus
- MUN School of Music
- MUN School of Science and the Environment
- Municipalities Newfoundland and Labrador
- National Research Council – Ocean, Coastal and River Engineering
- Newfoundland and Labrador Fish Harvesting Safety Association
- Nexus Centre for Humanities and Social Science Research
- Nova Scotia Environment
- Nova Scotia Woodlot Owners and Operators Association
- NunatuKavut Community Council
- Nunavut Fisheries Association
- Office of Public Engagement
- Ocean Choice International
- Ocean School
- Ocean Sonics Ltd.
- PAL Airlines
- Perceptions of Change Project, Dalhousie University
- Public Legal Information Association of NL
- Qalipu First Nation
- RIKON Research Centre, Waterford Institute of Technology
- Rural Future Research Centre, Dalhousie University
- Ruralis – Institute of Rural and Regional Research
- SafetyNet Centre for Occupational Health and Safety Research
- Seafarers’ International Union of Canada
- Ship Noise and Vibration Laboratory, University of Trieste
- Shipping Federation of Canada
- Shorefast
- Social Justice Co-operative of Newfoundland and Labrador
- St. John's Status of Women Council
- The Confederacy of Mainland Mi’kmaq
- Town of Portugal Cove St. Philips
- Transport Canada
- Tuckamore Festival
- Unama'ki Institute of Natural Resources
- Wood Canada Limited, Wood Environment & Infrastructure Solutions
- World Maritime University
Newsletters
Contact
MacKenzie Young, Project Manager (myoung@mun.ca)