Recognition that people live in the spatiotemporal connection of forests, rivers, and the ocean through food.
Published in Chapter:
Forest-River-Ocean Nexus-Based Education for Community Development: Aiming at Resilient Sustainable Society
Shimon Mizutani (Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, Japan), Kai Liao (Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, Japan), and Tsuyoshi Goto Sasaki (Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, Japan)
Copyright: © 2019
|Pages: 25
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-7958-8.ch010
Abstract
Bioeconomic research aims at developing a more resource-efficient and sustainable society that uses renewable biological resources to produce food, materials, and energy. Economic supremacy causes many problems, such as global warming, depletion of fossil fuels and natural resources, and loss of biodiversity. In order to build a more sustainable society with resource efficiency, it is necessary to discuss the institutional framework, which includes environmental assessment, environmental monitoring, biological resource management, human resources management, and education. This chapter examined the effectiveness of forest-river-ocean nexus-based education for community development (FRONE) in encouraging the sustainable use of biological resources. Combined with the adaptive cycle, FRONE is considered to have the potential to promote the sustainable use of biological resources. In the future, further bioeconomic research from the point of view of the education system will be needed.