Alicia Said

ORCID: 0000-0002-3686-5490
Publications
Citations
Views
---
Saved
---
About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Coastal and Marine Management
  • Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies
  • International Maritime Law Issues
  • Marine and fisheries research
  • Global trade, sustainability, and social impact
  • Marine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies
  • Conservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management
  • Marine and Coastal Ecosystems
  • Species Distribution and Climate Change
  • Food Industry and Aquatic Biology
  • Forest Management and Policy
  • Arctic and Russian Policy Studies
  • Island Studies and Pacific Affairs
  • Agricultural Innovations and Practices
  • Maritime Security and History
  • Asian Studies and History
  • Organic Food and Agriculture

Ministry for Health
2022-2023

Institut Universitaire Européen de la Mer
2019-2021

AMURE - Centre de droit et d'économie de la mer
2020-2021

Laboratoire des Sciences de l'Environnement Marin
2020-2021

Ifremer
2019-2020

Memorial University of Newfoundland
2018-2019

University of Kent
2017

Qualitative methods are important to gain a deep understanding of complex problems and poorly researched areas. They can be particularly useful help explain underlying conservation problems. However, the significance in choosing justifying appropriate methodological frameworks studies should given more attention ensure data collected analysed appropriately. We when, why, how qualitative used sampling strategies studies. To improve familiarity with among natural scientists, we recommend...

10.1080/08941920.2017.1333661 article EN Society & Natural Resources 2017-07-05

The Aarhus Convention is a globally recognised benchmark for democratic environmental governance. However, no assessment exists on whether European MPAs comply with the legal standards set out by Convention. Here, we focus public authorities' websites as tools promoting transparency, involvement, and processes. We assessed of 61 in thirteen countries using survey structured three pillars Convention: access to information, participation decision-making, justice. show that while most are used...

10.1016/j.marpol.2024.106012 article EN cc-by-nc-nd Marine Policy 2024-01-30

Abstract In marine spatial planning (MSP), the production of knowledge about marine-based activities is fundamental because it informs process through which policies delineating use space are created and maintained. This paper revises our view knowledge—developed during mapping processes—as undisputed factual basis on policy developed. Rather, argues that construction, management, validation, marginalisation different types stemming from stakeholders or disciplinary approaches at heart...

10.1007/s40152-020-00178-y article EN cc-by MAST. Maritime studies/Maritime studies 2020-07-21

Improved access to markets by small-scale fisheries (SSF), as called Sustainable Development Goal 14b and other global Mediterranean policy documents, is impeded the existing organisation of value chains market structures, which are typically antagonistic nature SSF. This article analyses in map drivers feedback loops that keep an unsustainable trajectory reviews key innovations support a socially, economically environmentally sustainable fishing sector. We show how current dominated lack...

10.1007/s40152-021-00222-5 article EN cc-by MAST. Maritime studies/Maritime studies 2021-04-29

The profile of small-scale fisheries has been raised through a dedicated target within the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDG14b) that calls for provision 'access artisanal fishers to marine resources and markets'. By focusing on access in context European Union, this article we demonstrate potential fishing sectors benefit from opportunities remains low due different mechanisms at play including legislative gaps Common Fisheries Policy, long-existing local structures somewhat...

10.1016/j.marpol.2020.104009 article EN cc-by Marine Policy 2020-05-29

Schlüter, A., M. Bavinck, Hadjimichael, S. Partelow, A. Said, and I. Ertör. 2020. Broadening the perspective on ocean privatizations: an interdisciplinary social science enquiry. Ecology Society 25(3):20. https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-11772-250320

10.5751/es-11772-250320 article EN cc-by Ecology and Society 2020-01-01

This review engages with the ongoing blue economy debate to decipher old and emerging forms of economic, institutional, physical social exclusions local communities vulnerable societies that may result from development ocean projects policies across globe. The results this scientific policy show that, whereas for some traditional maritime activities such as fisheries, drivers exclusion are well studied somehow addressed in policies, other sectors, energies or deep-sea mining, there is a lack...

10.3390/su15043253 article EN Sustainability 2023-02-10
Coming Soon ...