REGISTRATION & ABSTRACT SUBMISSION
The International Ocean Institute-USA and the city of St. Petersburg, FL,
USA, are hosting a Coastal Cities Summit on November 17-20, 2008, to address
the complex challenges that coastal city leaders face as populations increase,
resources are depleted, and the impacts of climate change are felt. The Coastal
Cities Summit intends to bring together 600-700 coastal city leaders, managers
and academics to discuss environmental, social, economic, and public policy
challenges and viable solutions.
Full details are available at www.coastalcities.org
The 3 ½ day conference will focus on three themes: Climate Change,
Risk and Vulnerability, and Sustainable Development. The planners are soliciting
speakers on areas that are particularly relevant to coastal cities: freshwater,
pollution, energy, infrastructure, and port security. All sessions are intended
to give a long-needed voice to those who are on the front lines taking leadership
on climate change, providing implementation and response plans and continuing
to focus on protecting citizens from possible extreme events and human-induced
degradation.
You may already be familiar with the International Ocean Institute (IOI) and
its 26 operational centers around the world. IOI-USA is the newest center,
established in St. Petersburg, FL in 2006 by agreement between IOI headquarters
in Malta and the University of South Florida (USF). The mission of IOI-USA
is to provide an international center of excellence in education, training,
development, and capacity building, with particular interest in coastal and
marine areas. The University of South Florida (USF), established in 1956 as
a public university, is a comprehensive multi-campus research university serving
more than 42,000 students. It is home to the Dr. Kiran C. Patel Center for
Global Solutions, a center dedicated to promoting sustainable healthy communities
around the world, and one of the co-organizers of the event. The resources
and expertise of USF allow IOI-USA to offer an outstanding conference program
that will attract attendees from around the world. Further information on the
conference can be found at www.coastalcities.org.
SPEAKERS:
Martin Parry (Co-Chair, IPCC 2nd Working Group)
Leon Panetta (Panetta Institute for Public Policy)
Jeremy Harris (former mayor of Honolulu)
Roberto Rosselli (Venice Water Authority)
John Ogden (Florida Institute of Oceanography)
Paul Holthus (World Ocean Council)
Richard Wainio (Tampa Port Director)
Saskia Sassen (Professor of Sociology, Columbia University, author of UN-Habitat
report)
President, Alternative Resources - (oil company representative - name forthcoming)
Wayne Joseph - Global Water Partnership
Background
Approximately 2.7 billion people--over 40% of the worlds total population--currently
live in coastal cities. In 1995 alone, an estimated 50 million people migrated
to the coastal zones of the United States. Combined with increasing birth rate
and life expectancy, as well as future climate change, the escalating strain
on public resources means that coastal city managers face unprecedented challenges.
Abstracts are invited for individual paper proposals, panel proposals, and
round table proposals that address either I) Coastal City Challenges, II) Coastal
City Practices, or III) Coastal City Solutions in one of the following broad
thematic areas:
Climate change
Risk and Vulnerability
Sustainable Development
IMPORTANT DATES
* May 15, 2008: Deadline for Abstract Submission
* July 1, 2008: Authors will be informed on selection by e-mail
* October 15, 2008: Deadline for Final Submissions
* July 31, 2008: Deadline for early registration
J. Mara Hendrix
Executive Assistant
International Ocean Institute - USA
c/o University of South Florida St. Petersburg
140 7th Ave. South, Bayboro 205 A
St. Petersburg, FL 33701 USA
p) 727-873-4745
f) 727-873-4889
mara@spadmin.usf.edu
mara@ioiusa.usf.edu
www.stpt.usf.edu/ioiusa
Conference Secretariat
Coastal Cities Summit 2008: Values and Vulnerabilities
November 17 - 20, 2008
www.coastalcities.org