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Stakeholder priorities for multi-functional coastal defence developments and steps to effective implementation

Stakeholder priorities for multi-functional coastal defence developments and steps to effective implementation
Stakeholder priorities for multi-functional coastal defence developments and steps to effective implementation
To fulfil international conservation commitments, governments have begun to recognise the need for more proactive marine planning policies, advocating sensitive engineering design that can deliver secondary benefits above and beyond the primary purpose of developments. In response, there is growing scientific interest in novel multi-functional coastal defence structures with built-in secondary ecological and/or socio-economic benefits. To ensure research efforts are invested effectively, it is first necessary to determine what secondary benefits can potentially be built-in to engineered coastal defence structures, and further, which of these benefits would be most desirable. It is unlikely that secondary benefits are perceived in the same way across different stakeholder groups. Further, their order of priority when evaluating different options is unlikely to be consistent, since each option will present a suite of compromises and trade-offs. The aim of this study was to investigate stakeholder attitudes towards multi-functional coastal defence developments across different sector groups. A preliminary questionnaire indicated unanimous support for implementing multi-functional structures in place of traditional single-purpose ones. This preliminary survey informed the design of a Delphi-like study, which revealed a more nuanced and caveated level of support from a panel of experts and practitioners. The study also elicited a degree of consensus that the most desirable secondary benefits that could be built-in to developments would be ecological ones – prioritised over social, economic and technical benefits. This paper synthesises these findings, discusses the perceived barriers that remain, and proposes a stepwise approach to effective implementation of multi-functional coastal defence developments.
143-155
Evans, Ally J.
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Garrod, Brian
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Firth, Louise B.
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Hawkins, Stephen J.
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Morris-Webb, Elisabeth S.
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Goudge, Harry
f7b3be2f-a4f7-4c30-8d6f-2104e1d26028
Moore, Pippa J.
f72a6bd0-79f4-41d2-b81b-84e86fd98ff6
Evans, Ally J.
4eb49ecb-84d7-4985-8cf6-894f5a88cffd
Garrod, Brian
7134139c-2d82-4928-949c-d7108bf98f24
Firth, Louise B.
2e186fef-ae70-4fc8-8f3f-34e0073eff9a
Hawkins, Stephen J.
758fe1c1-30cd-4ed1-bb65-2471dc7c11fa
Morris-Webb, Elisabeth S.
9f852e33-1d8e-4ea1-93f0-f733312191d3
Goudge, Harry
f7b3be2f-a4f7-4c30-8d6f-2104e1d26028
Moore, Pippa J.
f72a6bd0-79f4-41d2-b81b-84e86fd98ff6

Evans, Ally J., Garrod, Brian, Firth, Louise B., Hawkins, Stephen J., Morris-Webb, Elisabeth S., Goudge, Harry and Moore, Pippa J. (2017) Stakeholder priorities for multi-functional coastal defence developments and steps to effective implementation. Marine Policy, 75, 143-155. (doi:10.1016/j.marpol.2016.10.006).

Record type: Article

Abstract

To fulfil international conservation commitments, governments have begun to recognise the need for more proactive marine planning policies, advocating sensitive engineering design that can deliver secondary benefits above and beyond the primary purpose of developments. In response, there is growing scientific interest in novel multi-functional coastal defence structures with built-in secondary ecological and/or socio-economic benefits. To ensure research efforts are invested effectively, it is first necessary to determine what secondary benefits can potentially be built-in to engineered coastal defence structures, and further, which of these benefits would be most desirable. It is unlikely that secondary benefits are perceived in the same way across different stakeholder groups. Further, their order of priority when evaluating different options is unlikely to be consistent, since each option will present a suite of compromises and trade-offs. The aim of this study was to investigate stakeholder attitudes towards multi-functional coastal defence developments across different sector groups. A preliminary questionnaire indicated unanimous support for implementing multi-functional structures in place of traditional single-purpose ones. This preliminary survey informed the design of a Delphi-like study, which revealed a more nuanced and caveated level of support from a panel of experts and practitioners. The study also elicited a degree of consensus that the most desirable secondary benefits that could be built-in to developments would be ecological ones – prioritised over social, economic and technical benefits. This paper synthesises these findings, discusses the perceived barriers that remain, and proposes a stepwise approach to effective implementation of multi-functional coastal defence developments.

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Evans et al_Multifunctional coastal defence developments_Accepted manuscript.pdf - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 October 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 November 2016
Published date: January 2017
Organisations: Ocean and Earth Science

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Local EPrints ID: 404578
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/404578
PURE UUID: 6c32cd2c-42bc-41b9-9ae9-8e8650026563

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Date deposited: 11 Jan 2017 14:26
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:12

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Contributors

Author: Ally J. Evans
Author: Brian Garrod
Author: Louise B. Firth
Author: Elisabeth S. Morris-Webb
Author: Harry Goudge
Author: Pippa J. Moore

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