7
July
2021

IMO Visiting Lecturer on STCW Convention

Mr Jongchul Park (2nd row center) addresses students in the MET specialization.

Mr Jongchul Park, Technical Officer for the Maritime Training and Human Element Section of the International Maritime Organization (IMO), was a Visiting Lecturer for students in the Maritime Education and Training (MET) Specialization on 6 July. The special lecture focused on Contemporary Human Element Issues and Developments of the STCW Convention, 1978, and complemented the core instruction by resident faculty for the MET students.

Mr Park’s lecture focused on the IMO instruments and approaches to addressing the important issue of the “Human Element” including in IMO’s strategic plan (Res. A. 1110(30)). Contemporary developments relating to the STCW Convention were presented. Other topics discussed were issues related to Principles of Minimum Safe Manning, fatigue on board ship as well as legal and education/training issues arising from the innovative technical systems such as Maritime Autonomous Surface Ships. Mr Park also presented IMO’s work relating to the COVID-19 pandemic, in particular as it relates to health and safety protocols, the designation of seafarers as key workers and IMO circulars relating to, among others, training and certification. Other IMO officials joined the session and contributed to the discussions that followed Mr Park’s lecture.

Mr Park is a 2012 graduate of the World Maritime University (WMU) and his experience includes five years working on board merchant ships as a deck officer. His main task at IMO is to support the establishment and implementation of IMO instruments in relation to maritime training and education, and human element matters. Mr Park also supports the development and revision of IMO model courses which are to assist maritime training institutions in their establishment of training programmes and courses.

The Malmö MSc in Maritime Affairs is a 14-month programme with seven specializations: Maritime Education & Training; Maritime Energy Management; Maritime Law & Policy; Maritime Safety & Environmental Administration; Ocean Sustainability, Governance and Management; Port Management, and Shipping Management & Logistics. Foundation studies are taught in the first term and cover the introductory knowledge that is fundamental to all activities in the maritime field. Three successive terms focus on specialization studies and a dissertation. WMU has more than 150 Visiting Lecturers annually from around the world who contribute their expertise to enrich the education of WMU students. 


Related Documents
No items found.
Dissertation title
Deniece M. Aiken
Jamaica
Maritime Governance: Contextual Factors affecting Implementation of IMO Instruments
Anas S. Alamoush
Jordan
The Transition to low and near zero carbon emission ports: Extent and Determinants
Kristie Alleyne
Barbados
Spatiotemporal Analyses of Pelagic Sargassum: Biodiversity, Morphotypes and Arsenic Content
Kristal Ambrose
Bahamas
Contextual Barriers Facing Caribbean SIDS in the Global Governance of Plastic Pollution. Assessing the need for harmonized marine debris monitoring and contextual equity to support participation in the global plastics treaty negotiations by Caribbean SIDS
Ajay Deshmukh
India
Hinterland Connectivity and Market Share. A case of Indian Container Ports
Roxanne Graham
Grenada
Combatting the Marine Litter Crisis in the Windward Islands: Examining Source-to-Sea Pathways and Fostering Multi-Scale Solutions
Tricia Lovell
Trinidad and Tobago
The Problem of Abandoned, Lost and otherwise Discarded Fishing Gear (ALDFG) in Eastern Caribbean Small-Scale Fisheries. Understanding the Challenges, Defining Solutions
Renis Auma Ojwala
Kenya
Gender equality in ocean science for sustainable development
Yingfeng Shao
China
Harmonisation in the Rules Governing the Recognition of Foreign Judicial Ship Sales
Seyedvahid Vakili
Iran
The Development of a Systematic, Holistic and Transdisciplinary Energy Management Framework to Promote Environmentally Sustainable Shipyards