Institutional Change, Sustainability and the Sea

Currently, a substantial institutional change is under way for marine and coastal resources. Sustainability plays a major role therein. At the time of writing, roughly 2.3% of the marine and coastal territory has been declared a Marine Protected Area (MPA). The Convention of Biological Diversity se...

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Main Authors: Achim Schlüter, Sarah Wise, Kathleen Schwerdtner Mánez, Gabriela Weber de Morais, Marion Glaser
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-12-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/5/12/5373
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spelling doaj-49aa463e03ff4620981786e31483a05b2020-11-24T22:32:31ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502013-12-015125373539010.3390/su5125373su5125373Institutional Change, Sustainability and the SeaAchim Schlüter0Sarah Wise1Kathleen Schwerdtner Mánez2Gabriela Weber de Morais3Marion Glaser4Leibniz Center for Marine Tropical Ecology (ZMT), Bremen 28359, GermanySustainability Research Center (ARTEC), Bremen 28359, GermanyLeibniz Center for Marine Tropical Ecology (ZMT), Bremen 28359, GermanyLeibniz Center for Marine Tropical Ecology (ZMT), Bremen 28359, GermanyLeibniz Center for Marine Tropical Ecology (ZMT), Bremen 28359, GermanyCurrently, a substantial institutional change is under way for marine and coastal resources. Sustainability plays a major role therein. At the time of writing, roughly 2.3% of the marine and coastal territory has been declared a Marine Protected Area (MPA). The Convention of Biological Diversity set a target to protect 10% of the global marine environment by 2020. This move toward enclosure signifies a substantial shift away from mainly open access to at least de jure marine protected areas. What drives institutional change towards MPAs; and what role does sustainability play in this change in governance? In reflecting on these questions, the paper’s aim is to begin a dialogue on how the social-ecological system (SES) analytical framework developed by Elinor Ostrom and her collaborators engages differentially with marine and coastal systems. How institutional change takes place depends on the characteristics of the resources considered and the drivers of change for the particular resource. In order to characterize the marine and coastal realm we use the social-ecological system (SES) framework of Elinor Ostrom. Douglas North’s theory of institutional change is used to classify the change observed. The marine realm has ambiguous system boundaries and often high resource mobility. Uncertainties about system properties and change are much higher than for terrestrial systems. Interdependencies among different ecosystems are high, necessitating multi-level governance. Institutional change in this sector occurs under strong institutional path dependencies and competing ideologies. All these features make it particularly relevant to think about institutional change, sustainability and the current process of MPA expansion.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/5/12/5373institutional changesustainabilitymarine protected areasSES-diagnostic framework
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Achim Schlüter
Sarah Wise
Kathleen Schwerdtner Mánez
Gabriela Weber de Morais
Marion Glaser
spellingShingle Achim Schlüter
Sarah Wise
Kathleen Schwerdtner Mánez
Gabriela Weber de Morais
Marion Glaser
Institutional Change, Sustainability and the Sea
Sustainability
institutional change
sustainability
marine protected areas
SES-diagnostic framework
author_facet Achim Schlüter
Sarah Wise
Kathleen Schwerdtner Mánez
Gabriela Weber de Morais
Marion Glaser
author_sort Achim Schlüter
title Institutional Change, Sustainability and the Sea
title_short Institutional Change, Sustainability and the Sea
title_full Institutional Change, Sustainability and the Sea
title_fullStr Institutional Change, Sustainability and the Sea
title_full_unstemmed Institutional Change, Sustainability and the Sea
title_sort institutional change, sustainability and the sea
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Currently, a substantial institutional change is under way for marine and coastal resources. Sustainability plays a major role therein. At the time of writing, roughly 2.3% of the marine and coastal territory has been declared a Marine Protected Area (MPA). The Convention of Biological Diversity set a target to protect 10% of the global marine environment by 2020. This move toward enclosure signifies a substantial shift away from mainly open access to at least de jure marine protected areas. What drives institutional change towards MPAs; and what role does sustainability play in this change in governance? In reflecting on these questions, the paper’s aim is to begin a dialogue on how the social-ecological system (SES) analytical framework developed by Elinor Ostrom and her collaborators engages differentially with marine and coastal systems. How institutional change takes place depends on the characteristics of the resources considered and the drivers of change for the particular resource. In order to characterize the marine and coastal realm we use the social-ecological system (SES) framework of Elinor Ostrom. Douglas North’s theory of institutional change is used to classify the change observed. The marine realm has ambiguous system boundaries and often high resource mobility. Uncertainties about system properties and change are much higher than for terrestrial systems. Interdependencies among different ecosystems are high, necessitating multi-level governance. Institutional change in this sector occurs under strong institutional path dependencies and competing ideologies. All these features make it particularly relevant to think about institutional change, sustainability and the current process of MPA expansion.
topic institutional change
sustainability
marine protected areas
SES-diagnostic framework
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/5/12/5373
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