Simulating stakeholder behavior in a marine setting: Integrated coastal zone planning and the influential power of selected stakeholders in Frøya, Norway

Aquaculture expansion is a political priority in Norway, despite simmering conflicts and competing claims. We expand on this hypothesis and analyze the Norwegian governance system by adding stakeholder theory in case of a simulated model of the effects of municipal coastal zone planning in the munic...

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Main Authors: Rachel Gjelsvik Tiller, Yngve eSvalestuen, Pinar eÖztürk, Axel eTidemann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmars.2015.00090/full
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spelling doaj-1dcf0ff272344451b791cf5d1855e14d2020-11-25T00:00:26ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452015-11-01210.3389/fmars.2015.00090160041Simulating stakeholder behavior in a marine setting: Integrated coastal zone planning and the influential power of selected stakeholders in Frøya, NorwayRachel Gjelsvik Tiller0Rachel Gjelsvik Tiller1Yngve eSvalestuen2Pinar eÖztürk3Axel eTidemann4SINTEFNorwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)Aquaculture expansion is a political priority in Norway, despite simmering conflicts and competing claims. We expand on this hypothesis and analyze the Norwegian governance system by adding stakeholder theory in case of a simulated model of the effects of municipal coastal zone planning in the municipality of Frøya, Norway. One cannot analyze the governance system in Norway without fully comprehending the perspectives of the stakeholders involved. Different stakeholders will react and respond differently and have conflicting presumptions basing their actions towards the planning process for coastal areas. They will also have different levels of power and abilities to influence the system. The article presents the interdisciplinary, first generation development of an agent based simulation model that mimics the outcomes of coastal zone planning for a stakeholder groups, the commercial fishers and the aquaculture industry, based on qualitative input from legislation, regulations and stakeholder workshops. We proceed with verifying the applicability of this simulator in light of the key actors involved, namely the commercial fishers. We found that the simulator had two outcomes for the commercial fishers that were consistently recurring, namely collapse and stability, based on the simulated occurrences of complaints by the stakeholders, with the latter being the de facto perceptions of actuality by the commercial fishers. Using stakeholder theory, we argue that the aquaculture industry’s role has the saliency of an Important Stakeholder in Frøya has steered the commercial fishers, who has the role of Dependent Stakeholders according to stakeholder theory, to no longer see any legitimacy in the process in that their complaints were never upheld because of their lack of the attribute Power.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmars.2015.00090/fullInterdisciplinaryconflictMultiagent models; Game theory; Population dynamicsICZMStakeholderUser group
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rachel Gjelsvik Tiller
Rachel Gjelsvik Tiller
Yngve eSvalestuen
Pinar eÖztürk
Axel eTidemann
spellingShingle Rachel Gjelsvik Tiller
Rachel Gjelsvik Tiller
Yngve eSvalestuen
Pinar eÖztürk
Axel eTidemann
Simulating stakeholder behavior in a marine setting: Integrated coastal zone planning and the influential power of selected stakeholders in Frøya, Norway
Frontiers in Marine Science
Interdisciplinary
conflict
Multiagent models; Game theory; Population dynamics
ICZM
Stakeholder
User group
author_facet Rachel Gjelsvik Tiller
Rachel Gjelsvik Tiller
Yngve eSvalestuen
Pinar eÖztürk
Axel eTidemann
author_sort Rachel Gjelsvik Tiller
title Simulating stakeholder behavior in a marine setting: Integrated coastal zone planning and the influential power of selected stakeholders in Frøya, Norway
title_short Simulating stakeholder behavior in a marine setting: Integrated coastal zone planning and the influential power of selected stakeholders in Frøya, Norway
title_full Simulating stakeholder behavior in a marine setting: Integrated coastal zone planning and the influential power of selected stakeholders in Frøya, Norway
title_fullStr Simulating stakeholder behavior in a marine setting: Integrated coastal zone planning and the influential power of selected stakeholders in Frøya, Norway
title_full_unstemmed Simulating stakeholder behavior in a marine setting: Integrated coastal zone planning and the influential power of selected stakeholders in Frøya, Norway
title_sort simulating stakeholder behavior in a marine setting: integrated coastal zone planning and the influential power of selected stakeholders in frøya, norway
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2015-11-01
description Aquaculture expansion is a political priority in Norway, despite simmering conflicts and competing claims. We expand on this hypothesis and analyze the Norwegian governance system by adding stakeholder theory in case of a simulated model of the effects of municipal coastal zone planning in the municipality of Frøya, Norway. One cannot analyze the governance system in Norway without fully comprehending the perspectives of the stakeholders involved. Different stakeholders will react and respond differently and have conflicting presumptions basing their actions towards the planning process for coastal areas. They will also have different levels of power and abilities to influence the system. The article presents the interdisciplinary, first generation development of an agent based simulation model that mimics the outcomes of coastal zone planning for a stakeholder groups, the commercial fishers and the aquaculture industry, based on qualitative input from legislation, regulations and stakeholder workshops. We proceed with verifying the applicability of this simulator in light of the key actors involved, namely the commercial fishers. We found that the simulator had two outcomes for the commercial fishers that were consistently recurring, namely collapse and stability, based on the simulated occurrences of complaints by the stakeholders, with the latter being the de facto perceptions of actuality by the commercial fishers. Using stakeholder theory, we argue that the aquaculture industry’s role has the saliency of an Important Stakeholder in Frøya has steered the commercial fishers, who has the role of Dependent Stakeholders according to stakeholder theory, to no longer see any legitimacy in the process in that their complaints were never upheld because of their lack of the attribute Power.
topic Interdisciplinary
conflict
Multiagent models; Game theory; Population dynamics
ICZM
Stakeholder
User group
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmars.2015.00090/full
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