Ronán Long

Director, WMU-Sasakawa Global Ocean Institute and Professor
Ireland
Contact
Email: 
rl@wmu.se
Phone: 
+46 40 356349

Ronán Long

Director, WMU-Sasakawa Global Ocean Institute and Professor
Ireland
Contact
Email: 
rl@wmu.se
Phone: 
+46 40 356349
Degrees

Ph.D., Trinity College Dublin
B.C.L., National University of Ireland
Dip., Rhodes Academy Oceans Law and Policy

Qualifications

Areas of Expertise
Dispute Resolution
Ecosystem-based Management
Environmental Law
European Union Law
International Law
Law of the Sea
Marine Biodiversity in Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction

Professor Ronan Long is Director of the WMU-Sasakawa Global Ocean Institute and lectures on a broad range of ocean governance subjects including: the law of the sea, the law of climate change, as well as on multilateral diplomacy and dispute resolution. Previous appointments include a Personal Professorship and the Jean Monnet Chair of European Law at the National University of Ireland Galway, a Visiting Scholar at the Center for Oceans Law and Policy, University of Virginia School of Law and a Senior Distinguished Scholar-in-Residence, Law of the Sea Institute, Berkeley Law, University of California, faculty at the Rhodes Academy Oceans Law and Policy, as well as the United Nations - The Nippon Foundation of Japan Fellowship Programme. In the latter capacity, he has co-supervised mid-career legal professionals from Bangladesh, Mozambique, Myanmar, Guatemala, Sierra Leone, Costa Rica, Namibia and Nigeria. He has a longstanding working relationship with the Korean Maritime Institute including faculty membership of the Yeosu Academy of the Law of the Sea.

Professor Long was the first recipient of the Manahan Fellowship and has authored and co-edited 9 books and over 50 other publications to the leading peer-review journals, as well as over 130 international workshops/conference contributions in 40 countries and for 10 international organizations on the law of the sea, ocean governance, and the law and policy of the marine environment. His work has received critical acclaim in the academic literature and has been cited by the European Commission, the United Nations Secretary-General in his annual report to the General Assembly on oceans and the law of the sea, as well as in the jurisprudence of the superior courts in a number of common law jurisdictions and the Court of Justice of the European Union. He is a member of the editorial boards of the International Journal of Marine and Coastal Law and Ocean Development and International Law. Recent publications are translated into Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese and Korean.

Prior to his academic career, he was a permanent staff member at the European Commission (1993-2000) and undertook over 40 missions on behalf of the European Institutions to the Member States of the European Union, the United States of America, Canada, Central America as well as to African countries. His responsibilities included representing the European Commission at European Council working groups and at several international fora as well as drafting European regulations governing new satellite technologies for vessel monitoring systems.

Professor Long has participated on the European Union and the Irish delegations at a number of international fora dealing with the law of the sea including the United Nations and was Ireland’s representative at UNESCO /IOC Advisory Body of Experts of the Law of the Sea. He has acted as an adviser/consultant on oceans law and policy issues and undertaken commissioned work for foreign governments, the European Commission, as well as for public and private bodies including the OSPAR Commission, the Office of Legal Affairs at the United Nations, the International Hydrographic Organization, the International Council for the Exploration of the Seas, the North-Sea Regional Advisory Council, the Government of Scotland, and the Forum Fisheries Agency in the Pacific.

With over 20 years’ leadership experience in EU research programmes, Professor Long is participating in the MERCES Project in conjunction with 17 European partners, which is aimed at providing the EU with new, ecologically and economically sustainable protocols for the restoration of threatened and damaged marine ecosystems. He is also a member of the ATLAS consortium forming a dynamic new partnership between multinational industries, SMEs, governments and academia to assess the Atlantic’s deep-sea ecosystems and marine genetic resources. His current research interests are focused on regulatory and governance arrangements pertaining to the restoration of marine biodiversity, ecosystem-based management, the law of climate change, as well as human rights in the maritime domain. During his career in the Irish Naval Service, he won an academic prize at Britannia Royal Naval College and held a number of appointments ashore and afloat, including membership of the Navy’s elite diving unit. As a keen yachtsman, he has represented Ireland at the top competitive level in offshore racing, including spending a memorable year on board NCB Ireland in the work-up programme for the Round the World Race in 1989, and was a regular crew member on Moonduster in the 1980s.

Professor Ronan Long is Director of the WMU-Sasakawa Global Ocean Institute and lectures on a broad range of ocean governance subjects including: the law of the sea, the law of climate change, as well as on multilateral diplomacy and dispute resolution. Previous appointments include a Personal Professorship and the Jean Monnet Chair of European Law at the National University of Ireland Galway, a Visiting Scholar at the Center for Oceans Law and Policy, University of Virginia School of Law and a Senior Distinguished Scholar-in-Residence, Law of the Sea Institute, Berkeley Law, University of California, faculty at the Rhodes Academy Oceans Law and Policy, as well as the United Nations - The Nippon Foundation of Japan Fellowship Programme. In the latter capacity, he has co-supervised mid-career legal professionals from Bangladesh, Mozambique, Myanmar, Guatemala, Sierra Leone, Costa Rica, Namibia and Nigeria. He has a longstanding working relationship with the Korean Maritime Institute including faculty membership of the Yeosu Academy of the Law of the Sea.

Professor Long was the first recipient of the Manahan Fellowship and has authored and co-edited 9 books and over 50 other publications to the leading peer-review journals, as well as over 130 international workshops/conference contributions in 40 countries and for 10 international organizations on the law of the sea, ocean governance, and the law and policy of the marine environment. His work has received critical acclaim in the academic literature and has been cited by the European Commission, the United Nations Secretary-General in his annual report to the General Assembly on oceans and the law of the sea, as well as in the jurisprudence of the superior courts in a number of common law jurisdictions and the Court of Justice of the European Union. He is a member of the editorial boards of the International Journal of Marine and Coastal Law and Ocean Development and International Law. Recent publications are translated into Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese and Korean.

Prior to his academic career, he was a permanent staff member at the European Commission (1993-2000) and undertook over 40 missions on behalf of the European Institutions to the Member States of the European Union, the United States of America, Canada, Central America as well as to African countries. His responsibilities included representing the European Commission at European Council working groups and at several international fora as well as drafting European regulations governing new satellite technologies for vessel monitoring systems.

Professor Long has participated on the European Union and the Irish delegations at a number of international fora dealing with the law of the sea including the United Nations and was Ireland’s representative at UNESCO /IOC Advisory Body of Experts of the Law of the Sea. He has acted as an adviser/consultant on oceans law and policy issues and undertaken commissioned work for foreign governments, the European Commission, as well as for public and private bodies including the OSPAR Commission, the Office of Legal Affairs at the United Nations, the International Hydrographic Organization, the International Council for the Exploration of the Seas, the North-Sea Regional Advisory Council, the Government of Scotland, and the Forum Fisheries Agency in the Pacific.

With over 20 years’ leadership experience in EU research programmes, Professor Long is participating in the MERCES Project in conjunction with 17 European partners, which is aimed at providing the EU with new, ecologically and economically sustainable protocols for the restoration of threatened and damaged marine ecosystems. He is also a member of the ATLAS consortium forming a dynamic new partnership between multinational industries, SMEs, governments and academia to assess the Atlantic’s deep-sea ecosystems and marine genetic resources. His current research interests are focused on regulatory and governance arrangements pertaining to the restoration of marine biodiversity, ecosystem-based management, the law of climate change, as well as human rights in the maritime domain. During his career in the Irish Naval Service, he won an academic prize at Britannia Royal Naval College and held a number of appointments ashore and afloat, including membership of the Navy’s elite diving unit. As a keen yachtsman, he has represented Ireland at the top competitive level in offshore racing, including spending a memorable year on board NCB Ireland in the work-up programme for the Round the World Race in 1989, and was a regular crew member on Moonduster in the 1980s.

Emergent Technologies and Maritime Transport: Challenges and Opportunities
Tiago Fonseca, Khanssa Lagdami, Jens-Uwe Schröder-Hinrichs
Proceedings of the International Association of Maritime Universities (IAMU) Conference
(
), 
115-128
Assessing Innovation in Transport: An Application of the Technology Adoption (TechAdo) Model to Maritime Autonomous Surface Ships (MASS)
Tiago Fonseca, Khanssa Lagdami, Jens-Uwe Schröder-Hinrichs
(
), 
Study on social aspects within the maritime transport sector
Laura Carballo Piñeiro, Tiago Fonseca, Khanssa Lagdami
(
), 
Pub-000017
A Schönborn
Fuel
165
(
), 
389-396
Pub-000013
A Schönborn, M.D. Le, R. Fournet, P.-A. Glaude, V. Warth, B. Sirjean
Energy & Fuels
33
(
12
), 
12704–12713
Pub-000011
A Schönborn
Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers
(
), 
Pub-000001
A. Schönborn, MD Le, R Fournet, PA Glaude, V Warth, B Sirjean
Combustion and Flame
205
(
), 
466-483
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