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Visualizing the social in aquaculture: How social dimension components illustrate the effects of aquaculture across geographic scales

  • Gesche Krause
  • , Suzannah-lynn Billing
  • , John Dennis
  • , Jon Grant
  • , Lucia Fanning
  • , Ramón Filgueira
  • , Molly Miller
  • , José Antonio Pérez Agúndez
  • , Nardine Stybel
  • , Selina M. Stead
  • , Wojciech Wawrzynski

Résultats de recherche: ArticleRevue par des pairs

60 Citations (Scopus)
134 Téléchargements (Pure)

Résumé

Until very recently, governments of many countries, as well as their supporting organizations, have primarily addressed the biological, technical and economic aspects of aquaculture. In contrast, social and cultural aspects of aquaculture production have taken a backseat. Drawing on the observation that aquaculture development in Western Societies has largely failed to address these social effects across different scales and contexts, this paper offers a new way of capturing and visualising the diverse social dimensions of aquaculture. It does so by testing the ability to operationalise a set of social dimensions based on categories and indicators put forward by the United Nations, using several case studies across the North Atlantic. Local/regional stakeholder knowledge realms are combined with scientific expert knowledge to assess aquaculture operations against these indicators. The approach indicates that one needs to have a minimum farm size in order to have an impact of a visible scale for the different social dimension categories. While finfish aquaculture seems to be more social impactful than rope mussel farming, the latter can hold important cultural values and contribute to place-based understanding, connecting people with place and identity, thus playing a vital role in maintaining the working waterfront identity. It could be shown that aquaculture boosts a potential significant pull-factor to incentivise people to remain in the area, keeping coastal communities viable. By visualising the social effects of aquaculture, a door may be opened for new narratives on the sustainability of aquaculture that render social license and social acceptability more positive.
langue originaleEnglish
Numéro d'article103985
Nombre de pages13
journalMarine Policy
Volume118
Date de mise en ligne précoce20 mai 2020
Les DOIs
étatPublished - 1 août 2020

SDG des Nations Unies

Ce résultat contribue à ou aux Objectifs de développement durable suivants

  1. Zero hunger
    Zero hunger
  2. Life below water
    Life below water

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