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Planning for citizen participation in the EU mission to restore our ocean and waters by 2030

  • David Whyte*
  • , Line Debaveye
  • , Maiken Bjørkan
  • , Vida Maria Daae Steiro
  • , Maria Vittoria Marra
  • , Jan Seys
  • , Aoife Deane
  • , Wendy Namisnik
  • , Josep L. Pelegri
  • , Carine Simon
  • , Francesco Falcieri
  • , Rita Giuffredi
  • , Lucia Laurenza
  • , Eirini Apazoglou
  • , H. Cecilie Petersen
  • , María Elena Carbajal
  • , Ifigeneia Giannoukakou-Leontsini
  • , Noemí Fuster
  • , Cécile Nys
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • University College Cork
  • Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ)
  • Nordlandsforskning
  • Konsortium Deutsche Meeresforschung (KDM)
  • CSIC - Instituto de Ciencias del Mar (ICM)
  • National Research Council
  • Association EuroMarine
  • French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

The European Commission’s Mission to “Restore our Ocean and Waters by 2030” (Mission Ocean & Waters) is, at the most superficial level, an overarching policy framework with the primary aim of improving the health of European ocean, sea, and freshwater ecosystems. However, its use of the Mission framing and emphasis on fostering social, political, and economic transformations through its activities makes it a much more holistic and ambitious undertaking. This article explores challenges and opportunities that arise with the emphasis placed on increasing citizen participation in Mission Ocean & Waters, in the context of “Post-Normal Science” (Funtowicz & Ravetz Funtowicz and Ravetz, Krimsky and Golding (eds), Social Theories of Risk, Greenwood Press, Westport, 1992). We begin with a description of Mission Ocean & Waters, discussing its citizen engagement ambitions through the lens of Post-Normal Science, before describing the research methods used by the Horizon Europe project Preparing the Research and Innovation Core for Mission Oceans, Seas, & Waters (PREP4BLUE). We then present our results, highlighting four citizen engagement-based challenges that the Mission faces, and how PREP4BLUE has engaged with them. Finally, we discuss the future activities or structural changes that will be required if the Mission’s citizen engagement targets are to be achieved and for citizens to become core actors in protecting European aquatic ecosystems and developing a sustainable blue economy. These insights should prove useful to those developing and delivering Mission projects and those researching citizen participation in ocean and freshwater related challenges.

Original languageEnglish
Article number44
JournalMaritime Studies
Volume23
Issue number4
Number of pages21
ISSN1872-7859
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Citizen engagement
  • European Commission
  • Mission Ocean
  • Mission Ocean & Waters
  • Missions
  • Participation
  • Post-Normal Science

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