Photo: Joshua Vela
This is a collaborative, multisectoral, and transdisciplinary approach — working at the local, regional, national, and global levels — to achieve improved human health and well-being. Our approach identifies the inhabitants who are most vulnerable due to a lack of material wealth, water and food insecurity, and gender-related issues. We recognize that the health and well-being of local inhabitants is key to the conservation and sustainability of the Galapagos, like many other ecologically sensitive places.
Health and Community in Island Systems
Photo: Jack Dumbacher
Our projects include topics in: Natural Hazards, One Health, Hydrology and Water Management, and Earth Systems Modeling, Climate Change, Adaptation and Mitigation.
Let’s meet the impactful projects and their researchers:
Community and Human Health
This is a collaborative, multisectoral, and transdisciplinary approach — working at the local, regional, national, and global levels — to achieve improved human health and well-being. Our approach identifies the inhabitants who are most vulnerable due to a lack of material wealth, water and food insecurity, and gender-related issues. We recognize that the health and well-being of local inhabitants is key to the conservation and sustainability of the Galapagos, like many other ecologically sensitive places.
Our projects include topics in: Epidemiology, Public Health and Policy, Gender Studies, Tourism, and Food Security, Nutrition and Pollution.
Researcher: Candy Abad Arévalo
Year: 2024
Researchers: Fernando J. Astudillo, Paúl Rosero
Year: 2024
Researchers: Pablo Dávila, Stefan Terzer, Kevin Rodríguez, Wendy Vernaza, María Soledad Sarsoza, Marjorie Riofrío-Lazo
Year: 2024
Researchers: Cindy Fraga, Rainier Masa, Mimi Chapman
Year: 2024
Researchers: Corbin Jones, Diego Urquía
Year: 2024
Researchers: Joshua Miller, Amanda Thompson, Khristopher Nicholas, Linda Adair, Jill Stewart, Valeria Ochoa-Herrera
Year: 2024
Researcher: Jaime Ocampo
Year: 2024
Researcher: Caela O’Connell
Year: 2024
Researcher: Jaime Ortíz
Year: 2024
Researcher: María Isabel Paz
Year: 2024
Researcher: Sarah Rhea
Year: 2024
Researcher: Alfredo Rojas
Year: 2024
Researchers: Jill Stewart, Valeria Ochoa, Corbin Jones, Amanda Thompson, Hanna Brosky, Alyssa Grube
Year: 2024
Researchers: Amanda Thompson, Donald L. Fejfar, Elijah Watson, Kishan Patel, Nick Badhwa, Khristopher Nicholas, Margaret Bentley, Jill Stewart
Year: 2024
Researchers: Amanda Thompson, Enrique Terán, Margaret Bentley, Jill Stewart, Jaime Ocampo, Graham Pluck, Khristopher Nicholas
Year: 2024
Researcher: Amanda Thompson
Year: 2024
Researchers: Pieter Marinus Johannes van‘t Hof
Year: 2024
Researchers: Heather Wasser
Year: 2024
Researcher: Megan Williams, Ashley Leak Bryant
Year: 2024
Researcher: Sonia Zapata
Year: 2024
Researchers: Sofia Zaragocín, Joyce Robalino, Isabel Iturralde
Year: 2024
Researchers: Troy Sadler
Year: 2023
Researchers: Jill Stewart, Alyssa Grube
Year: 2023
Researchers: Jill Stewart, Alyssa Grube, Valeria Ochoa Herrera, Hanna Brosky
Year: 2023
Researcher: Natalia Villegas Rodríguez
Year: 2023
Researcher: Senay Yitbarek
Year: 2023
Researcher: Ronald Baker
Year: 2022
Researcher: Jaime Grijalva
Year: 2022
Researchers: Khristopher M. Nicholas, Amanda Thompson, Peggy Bentley, Sally Kuehn
Year: 2022
Researchers: Khristopher M. Nicholas, Margaret Bentley, Amanda Thompson
Year: 2022
Researchers: Kate Berry, Christofer Clemente, Andrew Olds, Carlos Valle
Year: 2021
Researchers: Susana Cárdenas, Günther Reck, Yu Fai Leung, Maryuri Yépez, Katalina Gallardo, Alex Hearn, Gonzalo Rivas, Valeria Ochoa-Herrera
Year: 2021
Researchers: Hannah Jahnke, Amanda Thompson, Margaret Bentley, Enrique Terán
Year: 2021
Researchers: Francisco Laso, Steve Walsh, Javier Arce-Nazario
Year: 2015-2021
Researchers: Steve Walsh, Richard Bilsborrow, Laura Brewington, Yang Shao, Hernando Mattei, Francisco Laso, Phil Page, Brian Frizzelle
Year: 2017
Researchers: Steve Walsh, Laura Brewington, Phil Page, Brian Frizzelle
Year: 2017
Researcher: Margarita Brandt
Year: 2016
Researcher: Florencio Delgado
Year: 2016
Researchers: Steve Walsh, Kim Engie, Phil Page, Brian Frizzelle
Year: 2016
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In 2022, the Galapagos Science Center (GSC) and the broader UNC & USFQ Galapagos Initiative will celebrate its 10th Anniversary. We are proud to announce the World Summit on Island Sustainability scheduled to be held on June 26–30, 2022 at the Galapagos Science Center and the Community Convention Center on San Cristobal Island.
The content of the World Summit will be distributed globally through social media and results documented through papers published in a book written as part of the Galapagos Book Series by Springer Nature and edited by Steve Walsh (UNC) & Carlos Mena (USFQ) as well as Jill Stewart (UNC) and Juan Pablo Muñoz (GSC/USC). The book will be inclusive and accessible by the broader island community including scientists, managers, residents, tourists, and government and non-government organizations.
While the most obvious goal of organizing the World Summit on Island Sustainability is to celebrate the 10th Anniversary of the GSC and the UNC-USFQ Galapagos Initiative, other goals will be addressed through special opportunities created as part of our operational planning of the World Summit.
For instance, we seek to elevate and highlight the Galapagos in the island conservation discourse, seeking to interact with other island networks in more obvious and conspicuous ways to benefit the Galapagos Islands, the UNC-USFQ Galapagos Initiative, and the world. We will seize the opportunity to further develop the I2N2 – International Islands Network-of-Networks. Further, we wish to highlight and emphasize multiple visions of a sustainable future for the Galapagos Islands and we cannot do this alone. Therefore, engaging the Ecuadorian Ministry of Environment, the Ministry of Tourism, the Government Council of Galapagos, the Galapagos National Park, and local Galapagos authorities, including government and non-government organizations and local citizen groups, is imperative.
Borrowing from Hawaii’s and Guam’s Green Growth Program and the Global Island Partnership, we wish to examine existing global programs that emphasize island sustainability and their incorporation into life, policies, and circumstances in the Galapagos Islands. We will also seek to enhance our connections with the institutional members of our International Galapagos Science Consortium and expand the Consortium through the recruitment of other member institutions. We will also work to benefit islands and their local communities by working with citizen groups as well as important NGOs who seek to improve the natural conditions in the Galapagos and diminish the impact of the human dimension on the future of Galapagos’ ecosystems.
Lastly, we will use the World Summit to benefit UNC & USFQ and our constituencies through a strong and vibrant communication plan about the World Summit, creating corporate relationships as sponsors, identifying funding goals through donors, and benefiting our study abroad program for student engagement in the Galapagos Islands. We plan to develop and issue a Galapagos Sustainability Communique after the World Summit that includes the vision and insights of all its participants for a sustainable Galapagos with applicability to global island settings.
We are eager to hear your perspective and have you join us at the World Summit on Island Sustainability!