UN Sustainable Development Goals Archives - University of Santo Tomas /tag/un-sustainable-development-goals/ The Pontifical and Royal Catholic University of the Philippines Mon, 23 Jun 2025 05:47:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 /wp-content/uploads/2019/07/cropped-800px-Seal_of_the_University_of_Santo_Tomas.svg_-32x32.png UN Sustainable Development Goals Archives - University of Santo Tomas /tag/un-sustainable-development-goals/ 32 32 Thomasian sustainability researchers propose sustainable ecotourism roadmap for Siquijor Island /thomasian-sustainability-researchers-propose-sustainable-ecotourism-roadmap-for-siquijor-island/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=thomasian-sustainability-researchers-propose-sustainable-ecotourism-roadmap-for-siquijor-island Mon, 23 Jun 2025 05:47:14 +0000 /?p=196965 A team of sustainability researchers from UST’s Research Center for Social Sciences and Education recently published a paper on how sustainable tourism can be promoted in the island of Siquijor,…

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A team of sustainability researchers from UST’s Research Center for Social Sciences and Education recently published a paper on how sustainable tourism can be promoted in the island of Siquijor, as envisioned from the expressed needs of its inhabitants. Following a training needs analysis and applying the Sustainable Tourism and Human Capital Development philosophies, the paper co-authored by Prof. Alain Jomarie G. Santos, PhD, Prof. Arlen A. Ancheta, PhD, Prof. Moises Norman Z. Garcia, PhD, and Prof. Maria Rosario Virginia Cobar-Garcia, PhD provided data-driven bases for future training programs.

The new study, entitled “Conservation of Sustainable Ecotourism on the Island of Siquijor through Sustainable Alternative Livelihoods, Training and Development,” was published in The International Journal of Social Sustainability in Economic, Social, and Cultural Context. The participants, who were inhabitants of the island, favored sustainable ecotourism but expressed the need for intensive capacity-building in both interpersonal and computer skills. In terms of actual livelihood activities, the participants identified housekeeping, healing massage training, and tour guiding/tour car driving as immediate areas of concern. To help manage the desired influx of tourists, the residents likewise expressed the need for basic first aid training.

Santos is the incumbent Chair of the Department of Economics of the Faculty of Arts and Letters, while Ancheta teaches at the Graduate School. Meanwhile, the Garcias are academic researchers of the Department of Biological Sciences of the College of Science.

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New study uncovers tawilis feeding ecology affected by Taal Volcano eruptions /new-study-uncovers-tawilis-feeding-ecology-affected-by-taal-volcano-eruptions/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=new-study-uncovers-tawilis-feeding-ecology-affected-by-taal-volcano-eruptions Mon, 23 Jun 2025 03:25:54 +0000 /?p=196954 Within Taal Lake is the much-loved yet endangered Sardinella tawilis. The much-loved fish delicacy is a staple of Luzon, yet has been marked Endangered in recent years. The recent eruptions…

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Within Taal Lake is the much-loved yet endangered Sardinella tawilis. The much-loved fish delicacy is a staple of Luzon, yet has been marked Endangered in recent years. The recent eruptions of Taal Volcano have posed further threats to the species, and a new study uncovers its updated feeding ecology, which may help creating an ecosystem-based conservation and management strategy so that the species can survive.

The paper “Shifts in the feeding ecology of the endemic and Endangered Sardinella tawilis in Lake Taal, Philippines” showed that the tawilis, which have been found to feed on zooplanktons,preferred “cyclopoid copepods and [showed a] noticeable increased preference for Moina micrura, Ceriodaphnia cornuta, and Bosmina fatalis.” This showed a shift from its earlier preference for calanoids. The findings were elicited from an application of stable isotope analysis and gut content analysis.

The new study was published on June 5, 2025 in Endangered Species Research, Volume 57, and was authored by a team of scientists from UST, De La Salle University, University of Rizal System, and the Department of Science and Technology. The authors are: Dale Anthony L. To (UST, DLSU), Asst. Prof. Elfritzson M. Peralta, MSc (UST), Justine R. De Leon (UST), Alexis E. Belen (UST), Lloyd Matthew L. Pineda (UST), Inst. Walled T. Ali (UST), Miguel Angelo F. Dollete (UST), Inst. Ray Allan N. Zafra (UST), Norman Mendoza (DOST), Prof. Richard Thomas B. Pavia, PhD (UST), Assoc. Prof. Dino T. Tordesillas, PhD (UST), Jonathan Carlo A. Briones (UST, URS), and College of Science Dean Rey Donne S. Papa, PhD.

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John Paul II, world peace in time of religious plurality become subjects of UST philosophers’ presentations in Europe /john-paul-ii-world-peace-in-time-of-religious-plurality-become-subjects-of-ust-philosophers-presentations-in-europe/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=john-paul-ii-world-peace-in-time-of-religious-plurality-become-subjects-of-ust-philosophers-presentations-in-europe Sat, 31 May 2025 22:28:00 +0000 /?p=195858 In May 2025, Professor Jove Jim S. Aguas, PhD, and Assistant Professor Blaise D. Ringor, PhD, participated in three major academic conferences in Poland and Romania, where they delivered keynote…

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In May 2025, Professor Jove Jim S. Aguas, PhD, and Assistant Professor Blaise D. Ringor, PhD, participated in three major academic conferences in Poland and Romania, where they delivered keynote and plenary addresses on themes central to the Church’s intellectual and moral vocation in a fractured world.

The first conference was the Karol Wojtyła Congress held on May 19 at the Pontifical University of John Paul II in Kraków, Poland. Scholars from around the globe convened to examine the philosophical and theological legacy of Pope Saint John Paul II, whose thought remains vital for contemporary personalism and Catholic anthropology. In the said conference, Aguas delivered a keynote address titled The Perfection of Power and Integration of the Person: St. Thomas Aquinas and Karol Wojtyła on Virtue, offering a synthesis of Thomistic metaphysics and Wojtyłan ethics. He argued for a view of virtue rooted not in coercion or convention but in rational and spiritual freedom. Ringor followed with Divinus in Caro: Karol Wojtyła’s Ontological Personalism In-Between Theomorphism and Technomorphism where he critiqued the twin extremes of deifying or dehumanizing the human person and proposed Wojtyła’s incarnational vision as a compelling alternative grounded in freedom, responsibility, and participation in truth.

Afterwards, they attended the 11th Religion, Knowledge, and Society Conference held in “Ovidius” University of Constanța, Romania with the theme Global Tendencies, Local Realities: Redefining Peace in a Multipolar World. In this event brought together international experts to explore new frameworks for understanding peace amid global unrest, Aguas presented his plenary lecture titled Global Solidarity: A Key Component in Attaining World Peace, proposing solidarity as both a spiritual calling and ethical imperative. He emphasized that authentic peace requires shared responsibility for upholding human dignity. In another plenary lecture, Whose God is in the City? Political Ontology, Religious Plurality, and the Indispensable Desire for Peace, Ringor explored the metaphysical and theological underpinnings of urban life. Drawing from classical and Christian political thought, he argued that peace depends on restoring a transcendent orientation within civic life.

The final leg of their academic sojourn brought Aguas and Ringor to Suceava, Romania, for the 11th Religion, Knowledge, and Society Seminar, Vatra Dornei from May 25 to 28. Centered on Pathways Towards Reconciliation: Philosophical and Theological Approaches, the seminar explored healing from historical and contemporary wounds. In this seminar, Aguas tackled the topic Reconciliation Through Dialogue: The Philippine Experience, drawing on interreligious dialogue efforts in the Philippines to demonstrate how openness and shared moral foundations foster peace while Ringor discussed the Thomistic-Augustinian account of reconciliation through divine mercy in his talk titled“Remember Me When You Come Into Your Kingdom”: Suffering, Repentance, and Mercy.

Aguas is a Full Professor of the Department of Philosophy and teaches at the Graduate School and the Faculty of Philosophy, while Ringor is the Academic Collaborations Officer of the Ecclesiastical Faculties of Theology, Philosophy, and Canon Law.

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Recommendations for increasing student interest in pursuing teaching bared in EDCOM 2-funded study /recommendations-for-increasing-student-interest-in-pursuing-teaching-bared-in-edcom-2-funded-study/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=recommendations-for-increasing-student-interest-in-pursuing-teaching-bared-in-edcom-2-funded-study Thu, 13 Mar 2025 10:20:06 +0000 /?p=193014 Senior high school students and college students surveyed by Prof. Rosalyn G. Mirasol, PhD of the Research Center for Social Sciences and Education bared an altruistic motivation to pursue teaching:…

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Senior high school students and college students surveyed by Prof. Rosalyn G. Mirasol, PhD of the Research Center for Social Sciences and Education bared an altruistic motivation to pursue teaching: to shape the children’s future and to make a social contribution. But will these be enough to make them actually pursue teaching? In a study funded by the Second Congressional Commission on Education (EDCOM 2), Mirasol provided recommendations on how to complement these altruistic intentions with concrete reforms.

Presenting the initial findings of her study “Integrating Multiperspectivity in Encouraging Students to Enter the Teaching Profession: Contexts, Challenges, and Causality,” Mirasol looked into the demographic characteristics of those enrolled in the academic track – humanities and social sciences strand of senior high school and in tertiary teacher education programs to determine factors that will predict their intent to consider teaching as a career and whether they feel this is the best career option.

Combining surveys and focus group discussions, the study uncovered low interest to teach among SHS students, who expressed uncertainty about job satisfaction and economic returns. Though they considered teachers to be crucial in society, concerns about salary and workload weighed heavily on SHS students.

In contrast, education students revealed long-held childhood aspirations to teach and find it fulfilling. They agree that teachers receive support and believe that teaching provides long-term career growth.

Mirasol recommended the engagement of the community, as well as mentoring and career guidance in basic education to help promote teaching as a career. School-industry partnerships as well as incentives and support for those pursuing teaching may also be explored. Finally, the promotion of diversity and inclusion is seen as a possible way of increasing the base of future teachers.

Mirasol teaches at the Department of English and is an academic researcher of the Research Center for Social Sciences and Education. The study is funded by the Ateneo de Manila University – EDCOM II partnership and was presented on March 12, 2025.

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Philippine traditional occupational therapy practice highlighted through actual cases in new book chapter /philippine-traditional-occupational-therapy-practice-highlighted-through-actual-cases-in-new-book-chapter/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=philippine-traditional-occupational-therapy-practice-highlighted-through-actual-cases-in-new-book-chapter Wed, 26 Feb 2025 09:27:44 +0000 /?p=191826 Occupational therapy practice in the areas of pediatrics, geriatrics, mental health, and physical rehabilitation were brought to the fore in a new book chapter entitled “Traditional occupational therapy practice settings.”…

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Occupational therapy practice in the areas of pediatrics, geriatrics, mental health, and physical rehabilitation were brought to the fore in a new book chapter entitled “Traditional occupational therapy practice settings.” Thomasian occupational therapy academic staff Dr. Paulin Grace Morato-Espino and retired academic staff Assoc. Prof. Sally Jane H. Uy and Mr. Joel R. Guerrero joined authors Roi Charles Pineda, Constantine L. Yu Chua, Camille Anne L. Guevara, Christianne Marie Coronel-Andigan, and Daryl Patrick Yao in sharing about the Philippine experience.

The authors indicated that occupational therapy in the Philippine has usually revolved around the four previously mentioned areas. Using cases personally witnessed by the authors, the authors pointed out the “drivers that have influenced (and that continue to influence) the current state and future direction of occupational therapy practice in these practice areas.” The authors concluded with mitigation measures to address the threats.

Uy and Guerrero are among the early faculty members of the Bachelor of Science in Occupational Therapy program in UST, which first offered it in the late 1990s. Her research interests include occupational therapy education and older adult patients. Meanwhile, Espino is among the early graduates of UST’s BS OT program in 2003. She is also among the first graduates of the new research-focused Doctor of Philosophy in Health Research program of the UST Graduate School. Her area of expertise is on child well-being, screen time, and play.

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UST’s elementary, secondary education programs retain Center of Excellence status conferred by Teacher Education Council /usts-elementary-secondary-education-programs-retain-center-of-excellence-status-conferred-by-teacher-education-council/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=usts-elementary-secondary-education-programs-retain-center-of-excellence-status-conferred-by-teacher-education-council Thu, 28 Nov 2024 05:00:00 +0000 /?p=188218 The UST College of Education’s bachelor’s programs in Elementary Education and Secondary Education have once again been recognized by the Philippine government as Centers of Excellence (COE), in a ceremony…

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The UST College of Education’s bachelor’s programs in Elementary Education and Secondary Education have once again been recognized by the Philippine government as Centers of Excellence (COE), in a ceremony conducted by the Teacher Education Council (TEC) on November 27, 2024.

With the recognition, the University joins the government “in developing a new system for recognizing and evaluating Teacher Education Centers of Excellence, as well as providing technical expertise in the review and enhancement of pre-service teacher education curricula.”

College of Education Assistant Dean Louie B. Dasas, PhD and Academic Programs Quality Assurance Office (APQAO) Director Marife V. Narcida, MS received the recognition from the TEC, chaired by Department of Education Secretary Juan Edgardo Angara, who was joined by the other officers and members of the TEC.

The Center of Excellence recognition, previously conferred solely by the Commission on Higher Education (CHED), is now conferred as Teacher Education-Center of Excellence (TE-COE) by the TEC of which the CHED Chairperson is an ex-officio member by virtue of Republic Act 11713, also known as the Excellence in Teacher Education Act.

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CCCPET bags Php 14M cultural preservation grant for Samar Fortification Project from US State Department /cccpet-bags-php-14m-cultural-preservation-grant-for-samar-fortification-project-from-us-state-department/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=cccpet-bags-php-14m-cultural-preservation-grant-for-samar-fortification-project-from-us-state-department Wed, 27 Nov 2024 02:14:04 +0000 /?p=187099 The University of Santo Tomas, through the Graduate School Center for Conservation of Cultural Property and Environment in the Tropics, bagged the prestigious Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation (AFCP) grant…

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The University of Santo Tomas, through the Graduate School Center for Conservation of Cultural Property and Environment in the Tropics, bagged the prestigious Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation (AFCP) grant for its Samar Fortification Project. This grant, valued at Two Hundred Forty-Five Thousand Dollars ($245,000.00), will be a game-changer in the Safeguarding Sentinels Of The Samar Seas: Conservation Project of Samar Fortifications.

With a transdisciplinary approach, the project will advance heritage research, education programs and tourism promotion that will dramatically impact the Samar Province’s holistic development. These forgotten fortifications are value-added to Spark Samar’s program by promoting historically significant tourist destinations that provide opportunities for community-driven conservation.

To jumpstart the project, the US Embassy in the Philippines, Deputy Director for Public Engagement Chad Kinnear, joined by Resource Coordination Specialist Mr. Edwin Raymund A. Vergara, conducted an ocular inspection last November 21-22, 2024 in three (3) fortification sites in Samar Province. They were accompanied by the university’s composite team from USTGS-CCCPET, UST College of Tourism and Hospitality Management, and UST College of Architecture. Samar Governor Sharee Ann Tan expressed her sincere gratitude to the US Embassy of the Philippines and to the University of Santo Tomas.

Ms. Beverly M. Bautista, MAEd, Officer-in-Charge of USTGS-CCCPET and Project Director, emphasizes that this initiative aligns with the university’s vision of preserving cultural heritage that will inspire future generations as responsible stewards. Through the AFCP grant, USTGS-CCCPET gets to continue its role as a prime mover of cultural heritage preservation, advocating  heritage utilization toward community development.

The project is set to launch on December 4, 2024, in Sta. Rita, Samar, in partnership with Samar Provincial Government and the Local Government of Sta. Rita.

The AFCP, established by the US Department of State, supports projects worldwide that preserve cultural heritage, including historic buildings, archaeological sites, collections, and intangible heritage such as traditional crafts and languages.

UST Team, Sta. Rita LGU team and

US Embassy Officials Deputy Director for Public Engagement Chad Kinnear (middle, blue shirt) Resource Coordination Specialist Mr. Edwin Raymund A. Vergara (middle, red shirt)

Ms. Beverly Bautista lead the ocular visit in Tinago Ruins in Tarangan with US Embassy Officials Deputy Director for Public Engagement Chad Kinnear (blue shirt) Resource Coordination Specialist Mr. Edwin Raymund A. Vergara (red shirt)

UST Team, Gandara LGU Officials, Bangahon local community with

US Embassy Officials Deputy Director for Public Engagement Chad Kinnear (middle, blue shirt) Resource Coordination Specialist Mr. Edwin Raymund A. Vergara (middle, red shirt)

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Infectious diseases specialist Bergantin joins ASEAN panel of medical virologists /infectious-diseases-specialist-bergantin-joins-asean-panel-of-medical-virologists/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=infectious-diseases-specialist-bergantin-joins-asean-panel-of-medical-virologists Fri, 22 Nov 2024 00:24:13 +0000 /?p=186752 Assoc. Prof. Maria Rhona Gatpandan-Bergantin, MD, an infectious diseases specialist of the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery and the UST Hospital, joined an international panel of experts to share latest…

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Assoc. Prof. Maria Rhona Gatpandan-Bergantin, MD, an infectious diseases specialist of the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery and the UST Hospital, joined an international panel of experts to share latest developments and concerns in the three-day Asia-Pacific Congress of Medical Virology, held from November 19-21, 2024 at the Singapore Expo. Specifically, Bergantin joined the panel on pandemic preparedness.

The discussion, moderated by Professor Linfa Wang of Duke-National University of Singapore Medical School and Dr. Lee Fok Kay of Temasek Foundation, Singapore, delved into what it takes to be ready for the next pandemic. Bergantin and her co-panelists stressed the importance of convincing governments and leaders of the ASEAN groups that the knowledge base gained during the COVID-19 pandemic is a vital resource worth sharing to the general public. Bergantin recalled the collaboration between the government and professional associations during the pandemic. A case in point was the preparation of COVID-19 guidelines prepared by the Philippine Society for Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, whose inputs helped craft policies during the onslaught of the dreaded virus.

The panel included Indonesia’s Dr. Darmawali Handoko, Medical Services Deputy Director Prof. Derrick Heng, Thailand’s Mahidol University Prof. Prassert Auewarakul, and Malaysia’s Tropical Diseases Research and Education Center Executive Director Prof. Dr. Sazaly bin Abu Bakar.

Bergantin also added that a sound pandemic preparedness policy requires the participation of not just scientists and government leaders, but also economists, vulnerable groups, and community members. In an interview with the Communications Bureau, Bergantin said that: “I am just thankful that aside from teaching, I have been included in various clinical practice guideline creation and health technology assessment thus I have first hand experience in policy-making (recommendation), which I have just realized when I was asked to join the panel. I may not hold a degree in public health but working for the Filipinos in my capacity from the academe, together with other specialists from UST who are regularly consulted by the government based on their expertise, the Thomasian spirit of competence, compassion and commitment truly burns bright.”

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Bergantin joined fellow doctors and healthcare professionals in the UST Hospital to save lives amidst the strictest of mobility restrictions. Look at her COVID-19-focused interview with the Communications Bureau here: 

The congress drew over 300 onsite participants and was supported by Temasek Foundation, Singapore.

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Lack of climate justice awareness in global north, south countries highlighted new Nature Climate Change paper /lack-of-climate-justice-awareness-in-global-north-south-countries-highlighted-new-nature-climate-change-paper/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=lack-of-climate-justice-awareness-in-global-north-south-countries-highlighted-new-nature-climate-change-paper Mon, 21 Oct 2024 03:49:24 +0000 /?p=184647 At least 66% of over 5,500 participating adults have never heard of climate justice, according to a new paper published in Nature Climate Change by an international group of scholars…

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At least 66% of over 5,500 participating adults have never heard of climate justice, according to a new paper published in Nature Climate Change by an international group of scholars joined by UST Department of Psychology Professor Marc Eric S. Reyes, PhD.

The open-access article, entitled “Climate justice beliefs related to climate action and policy support around the world,” focused on the value of climate justice beliefs “as a motive for climate action across diverse geographical contexts.” 

Participants acknowledged the influence of capitalism and colonialism on the climate crisis and how it adversely impacts poor people.

The survey found that participants from countries with higher greenhouse gas emissions and politically salient social inequality associated climate justice beliefs with policy support and various indices of climate action.

The paper can be accessed here:  

Reyes, a renowned scholar and Psychological Association of the Philippines President from 2020-2022, also teaches at the Graduate School and is an academic researcher of the Research Center for Social Sciences and Education.

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Fisheries resources studies by Thomasians spotlighted in Chonnam National University, Korea /fisheries-resources-studies-by-thomasians-spotlighted-in-chonnam-national-university-korea/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=fisheries-resources-studies-by-thomasians-spotlighted-in-chonnam-national-university-korea Thu, 26 Sep 2024 01:20:24 +0000 /?p=183963 Prof. Rey Donne S. Papa, PhD and Asst. Prof. Reuel M. Bennett, Dr.rer.nat. of the UST College of Science – Department of Biological Sciences and Research Center for the Natural…

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Prof. Rey Donne S. Papa, PhD and Asst. Prof. Reuel M. Bennett, Dr.rer.nat. of the UST College of ScienceDepartment of Biological Sciences and Research Center for the Natural and Applied Sciences, were invited by Prof. Ho Young Soh, Dean of the College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences to serve as speakers during the 2nd International Symposium on Marine Environment and Fisheries Resources held at the Yeosu campus of Chonnam National University (CNU) held from September 25 to 26, 2024.

Bennett delivered a lecture entitled “Oomycetes in Philippine freshwater ecosystems”, highlighting current research developments in taxonomy and potential utilization of oomycetes (aquatic fungi) for aquaculture as natural food source due to its potential for mass propagation and fatty acid content. Meanwhile, Papa updated the audience on “Methane Dynamics and Limnological Monitoring in Tropical East Asia: The Case of Lake Yambo”, which emphasized on the importance of routine limnological monitoring for water quality and methane concentrations in tropical lakes such as Lake Yambo as these are closely linked to eutrophication, especially in tropical lake ecosystems, especially those heavily utilized for aquaculture.

Papa and Bennett joined speakers from Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Turkiye, and Vietnam in giving lectures on the ecology and life history of economically important aquatic organisms, aquaculture, and fisheries, including topics on conservation, management, climate change adaptation and sustainability.

Chonnam National University holds the distinction of having the first and oldest fisheries and marine educational institution in South Korea and is known for receiving the most research funding among Korean universities.

Its College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences maintains two research vessels, including the 96.45m ship Sae Dong Baek which was launched in 2019. Symposium speakers were given the opportunity to visit and inspect the research facilities of their two research vessels, which routinely conducts research cruises around the Korean peninsula.  A best research poster competition was also held during the symposium where graduate students and researchers of Chonnam National University showcased their latest research findings.

The event was organized by the CNU College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences in cooperation with the Korea Fishery Resource Management Research Institute and the Institute of Fishing Village and Aquaculture.

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