
The Ecosystem Approach to Marine Planning and Management
- 256 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
The Ecosystem Approach to Marine Planning and Management
About this book
The marine environment is one of our most precious yet fragile natural resources. It provides a wide range of essential goods and services, including food, regulation of climate and nutrient cycling, as well as a setting for transport, recreation and tourism. This environment is however extremely complex and very sensitive to development pressures and other forms of human influence. Planning and management of the sea are similarly complicated, reflecting intricate legal, institutional and ownerships patterns. This creates a situation where marine ecosystems are vulnerable to over-exploitation or neglect.
The Ecosystem Approach to Marine Planning and Management describes how growing concern about the state of our seas is resulting in the development of new approaches to marine planning and management. For example, the United Nations Environment Programme has called for the widespread introduction of Marine Spatial Planning (MSP), and the European Union has recently been consulting on a new European Maritime Policy designed to stimulate economic growth but at the same time protect the resource base. Within the United Kingdom, the 2010 Marine Act draws upon the experience of town and country planning and brings into being a new system of Marine Spatial Planning. The authors show that a common feature of all these developments is an appreciation that more integrated forms of planning and management are required for our seas and that new arrangements must draw together understanding from natural science, social science and many other perspectives. Adopting such a trans-disciplinary and holistic (or 'ecosystems') approach, the book distils the expertise of these different disciplines and seeks to promote a broader understanding of the origins and practicalities of new approaches to marine planning and management.
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Information
Chapter 1
The Ecosystem Approach and Planning and Management of the Marine Environment
Sue Kidd , Ed Maltby , Leonie Robinson , Adam Barker and Chris Lumb
- Explain the origins, definitions and principles of the ecosystem approach (EA) and associated United Nations (UN) operational guidance;
- Review some of the lessons that can be drawn from existing experience of applying EA in non-marine and marine areas; and
- Provide a transdisciplinary discussion of key issues that require further attention in developing EA in planning and management of the sea in order to set the scene for the chapters that follow.
Introduction
- sustainability of economic systems and the quality of human life is inevitably dependent on the maintenance of healthy ecosystems;
- humans are an integral part of ecosystems rather than separate from them; and
- a sectoral approach to planning and management is generally insufficient to deal with the complex interrelationships and diverse stakeholder priorities that exist in the real world.
Origins of EA
- Maintain ecosystem health (for example, maintain and protect ecosystem integrity and functions, restore damaged ecosystems).
- Protect and restore biodiversity (protect native genes, species, populations, ecosystems).
- Ensure sustainability (for example, incorporate long time horizons, consider the needs of future generations, include both ecological and economic sustainability).
- Systems perspective (for example, a broad, holistic approach to management; manage at multiple scales and consider the connections between different scales; coordinate across administrative, political and other boundaries to define and manage ecosystems at appropriate scales).
- Human dimensions (for example, incorporate social values and accommodate human uses within ecological constraints, view humans as embedded in nature).
- Adaptive management, in which management is conducted as a continuous experiment.
- Collaboration, in which planning and management are joint decision-making processes that involve sharing power with key stakeholders.
| Characteristic | Traditional approach | EA | Benefits of EA |
| Management structure | Isolationist | Horizontal/inclusive | More holistic (addresses multiple problems) |
| Management objectives | Single issue focus | Ecosystem focus | Reduces chance of cumulative effects and opposing objectives |
| Overarching objective | Economic/environmental tradeoffs | Maintaining ecological integrity | More science-focused decisions |
| Management boundaries | Constitutionally defined | Ecologically defined | Reduces overlap between multiple jurisdictions |
| Management approach | One-size fits all | Place-specific | Objectives are relevant to particular system |
| Citizen engagement | Limited consultations | Extensive collaboration | Decisions are more transparent to local stakeholders and more likely to receive lasting support |
| Decision-making process | Linear, top-down | Integrative (both top-down and bottom-up) and circular | Better integration of multiple values increasing the likelihood of consensus |
| Follow-up | Limited | Adaptive management | Increased opportunity to learn from experiences |
| SBSTTA1 (Paris, 1995) | Recommendation I/3: Recommends that a holistic approach be taken towards conservation and su... |
Table of contents
- Front Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- List of Figures, Tables and Boxes
- List of Contributors
- List of Acronyms
- Preface
- 1 The Ecosystem Approach and Planning and Management of the Marine Environment
- 2 Developing the Human Dimension of the Ecosystem Approach: Connecting to Spatial Planning for the Land
- 3 EU Maritime Policy and Economic Development of the European Seas
- 4 Marine Planning and Management to Maintain Ecosystem Goods and Services
- 5 Review of Existing International Approaches to Fisheries Management: The Role of Science in Underpinning the Ecosystem Approach and Marine Spatial Planning.
- 6 The Ecosystem Approach to Marine Planning and Management – The Road Ahead
- Index