Women and men benefit from and access different ecosystems

SPACES has conducted workshops gathering policy makers, organizations and communities in Kenya and Mozambique.

Having money does not always translate to being “not poor”.

SPACES researchers have documented that benefits from fisheries are unequally distributed.

SPACES facilitated discussions and networking between organizations at multiple levels.

SPACES ecological modelling highlights the specific ways in which ecosystem change affects different aspects of human wellbeing.

TIM DAW INTRODUCES ECOSYSTEMS SERVICES ELASTICITY

EXPLORING TRADEOFFS IN WELLBEING IN COASTAL SYSTEMS IN KENYA

TIM DAW PRESENTS FISH PRODUCTION AND SOCIAL TRADEOFFS IN MOMBASA

DOMINIQUE D’EMILLE, A RESEARCH ASSISTANT AT UNIVERSIDADE EDUARDO MONDLANE SUMMARIZES THE SPACES PROJECT

TIM DAW UNPACKS THE CONNECTIONS BETWEEN ECOSYSTEM SERVICES AND HUMAN WELLBEING

HOW DOES SCENARIO CREATION HAPPEN? TIME-LAPSE VIDEO BY DIEGO GALAFASSI