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Opening session
Mar. 25
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Challenging the complexities of informal elderly care
Mar. 25
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Overcoming racism in healthcare: a European and African perspective on how to improve medical training
Mar. 25
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Building on PolyCIVIS Insights: Enhancing African-European Cooperation in Research and Evidence-Based Policy
Mar. 25
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Polycrisis and forced displacement across Africa and Europe
Mar. 25
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Rethinking Aging: Scientific Evidence, Public Perception, and Cultural Practices
Mar. 25
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A cross-continental endeavor towards gender equality
Mar. 25
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Transcultural memories and narratives
Mar. 25
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Experimentation and the making of experiential knowledge
Mar. 25
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Transregional sustainable development
Mar. 25
Dr. Boudaya Lobna - University of Sfax, Sfax (Tunisia)
Mr. Khan Zaahid - University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg (South Africa)
PhD Diallo Khady - Université libre de Bruxelles, Brussels (Belgium)
Mr. Mangane
Djibril - Enda ECOPOP, Dakar (Senegal),
Dr. Lorenz Wendt - Paris Lodron University of Salzburg, Salzburg (Austria)
Mr. Thierry De Coster - Ucoopia NGO / Université libre de Bruxelles, Brussels (Belgium)
Collective proposal
This panel proposes to analyze the specific contributionon of
partnerships between African and European universities and civil society
organizations (CSOs), including Ucoopia1, to Integrated Coastal Zone
Management (ICZM) within the framework of the climate, environment, and
energy nexus. Coastal ecosystems, particularly mangroves and seagrass
meadows, represent critical socio-ecological systems increasingly
exposed to anthropogenic and climatic pressures.
Universities generate
robust analytical frameworks—ecological inventories, socio-ecological
resilience assessments, climate impact modeling, and social science
research—while CSOs/NGOs ensure the translation of such knowledge into
practice, simultaneously providing empirical data and feedback that in
turn stimulate new scientific questions.
This science–society interface
constitutes a research–action–transformation continuum, enabling the
production of contextualized knowledge, testing its applicability, and
informing public policies. Particular atention will be given to the
importance of designing and financing projects in the areas of
mitigation (emission reduction and carbon sink protection), adaptation
(local capacity-building, conomic and energy diversification), and
compensation (loss and damage) when impacts are irreversible.
By
convening scholars and practitioners from environmental sciences,
climate and geosciences, economics, law, public health (OneHealth), and
education, the panel will illustrate the conditions under which
Africa–Europe collaboration can foster transdisciplinary knowledge
production, contribute to the energy transition, and strengthen both
climate resilience and environmental governance.