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Development and Expansion in the Marine Social Sciences: Insights from the Global Community

34 Pages Posted: 4 Nov 2021 Publication Status: Published

See all articles by Emma McKinley

Emma McKinley

Cardiff University - School of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Rachel Kelly

University of Tasmania - Centre for Marine Socioecology

Mary Mackay

Castray Esplanade - CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere

Rebecca Shellock

Australian National University (ANU) - Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science

Christopher Cvitanovic

Australian National University (ANU) - Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science

Ingrid van Putten

Castray Esplanade - CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere

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Abstract

Increasing recognition of the human dimensions of climate change, pollution, exploitation, and other threats to the marine environment has resulted in an expansion of marine social science research in recent years. The importance of understanding the complexities of societal relationships with our global ocean, seas and coasts, and how this might influence sustainable management and effective and equitable governance, will be crucial to address the challenges facing our marine systems. Given their growing importance, this paper seeks to undertake a global assessment of the current status and trends in marine social science research and outline the next steps and key directions for the field. Specifically, by adapting established horizon scanning methods, we conduct a survey of the global marine social science research and practitioner community. We find that current research within the marine social sciences is broad, and focused on themes relating to (but not limited to) governance and decision-making, stakeholder participation and engagement, the socio-cultural dimensions of marine systems, ocean literacy, community-based and area-specific management, and the blue economy. We also identify priorities for future research, for example, relating to aspects of social justice, welfare and equity in relation to the use and governance of marine systems, blue growth and the expansion of marine industries, and enhancing ocean literacy to build ocean stewardship and citizenship. Our results, however, suggest several barriers that may prevent the extent to which the marine social sciences can continue to expand and develop in these directions. Barriers include, but are not limited to, the relationship between marine social sciences and other disciplines (i.e. lack of acceptance of marine social science as a legitimate discipline) and the visibility and recognition of marine social science both internal and external to academia (e.g. by policy-makers and practitioners). Finally, we identify a series of enablers for overcoming the barriers identified (e.g. promoting marine social sciences, engaging stakeholders and enlisting champions and building interdisciplinary teams). In doing so, this paper generates prospective thinking and highlights recommendations for effective marine social science research and practice, as well as the potential for interdisciplinary collaboration into the future.

Keywords: marine social sciences, interdisciplinary, ocean sciences, human dimensions

Suggested Citation

McKinley, Emma and Kelly, Rachel and Mackay, Mary and Shellock, Rebecca and Cvitanovic, Christopher and van Putten, Ingrid, Development and Expansion in the Marine Social Sciences: Insights from the Global Community. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3956820 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3956820
This version of the paper has not been formally peer reviewed.

Emma McKinley (Contact Author)

Cardiff University - School of Earth and Environmental Sciences ( email )

Cardiff
United Kingdom

Rachel Kelly

University of Tasmania - Centre for Marine Socioecology ( email )

Hobart 7005
Tasmania
Australia

Mary Mackay

Castray Esplanade - CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere ( email )

Hobart 7000
Tasmania
Australia

Rebecca Shellock

Australian National University (ANU) - Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science ( email )

Canberra
Australia

Christopher Cvitanovic

Australian National University (ANU) - Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science ( email )

Canberra
Australia

Ingrid Van Putten

Castray Esplanade - CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere ( email )

Hobart 7000
Tasmania
Australia