

SYREN
PTDC/CTA-CLI/1065/2021
REduzir o Carbono na atmosfera aumentando a Alcalinidade em ambientes intermareais: Potencial e impactes
Coastal risks threaten human welfare. Sea level rise, high-intensity storms, coastal flooding and erosion will continue to threaten coastal communities, probably more frequently and intensely. In this scenario, key elements of sustainable development must include understanding risk, recognising systems are interconnected, including stakeholders and building capacities for resilience. Planning for community resilience will require participatory techniques to engage those who are vulnerable. In particular, youth set to inherit the predicted impacts of climate change must be engaged with the processes that determine the future of their built environments.
The SYREN project aims to foster community resilience by harnessing science-based knowledge and insights of teenagers, fostering collaborative innovation between the two. A novel aspect of this research lies in understanding and developing in co creation an increasingly favoured approach that aligns research and service development, to create youth experts on coastal risk engagement. This entails the involvement of youth in meaningful and sustained ways on issues of importance to their communities, thus contributing to the engagement of future generations.
The SYREN project is a three-year research initiative aimed at developing innovative, youth-centred approaches to coastal risk engagement. It aims to:
Joachim Schoenfeld – Investigador: Helmoltz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel (GEOMAR)
Patricia Grasse – Investigador: German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig (iDiv)