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Rockall and Hatton: resolving a super wicked marine governance problem in the high seas of the northeast Atlantic Ocean

Rockall and Hatton: resolving a super wicked marine governance problem in the high seas of the northeast Atlantic Ocean
Rockall and Hatton: resolving a super wicked marine governance problem in the high seas of the northeast Atlantic Ocean
The Hatton-Rockall plateau in the northeast Atlantic Ocean has long been the subject of interest for fishers, prospectors, conservationists, managers, planners, and politicians. As a feature that straddles national and international waters, it is subject to a multitude of competing and confounding regulations, making the development of a holistic management plan for sustainable use fraught with difficulty. Here, the various stakeholders in the area are collated, together with the rules they have created or must abide by with respect to biodiversity assets, maritime resources, and governance frameworks. Blue Growth envisages optimal use of sea areas, including potential for additional commercial activities. Current research and stakeholder engagement efforts to achieve this integration are described, and the contribution of the EU-funded ATLAS project is analyzed. In particular, more precise, ground-truthed information has the potential to inform systematic conservation planning, providing the basis for sustainable development and improving adaptive management. By scrutinizing and exposing all the elements in this example of a spatially managed area we show how the expectations of each stakeholder can be better managed.
Areas beyond national jurisdiction ABNJ, Blue growth, Ecologically or biologically significant area EBSA, Ecosystem approach to fisheries management EAFM, Marine spatial planning MSP
2296-7745
Johnson, David E.
ac1c7dcb-a817-47bc-aaaa-4a0e268c27d0
Froján, Christopher Barrio
4935e7ee-ac0f-41bd-b00b-2c5806561d74
Neat, Francis
7418a36b-a2b9-4146-9cdc-6ef1456fd836
Van Oevelen, Dick
7a75c2d2-d59c-4f35-a3da-8ff31d375b61
Stirling, David
db96211a-7560-4857-a747-407ae5be25ea
Gubbins, Matthew J.
a9c7d209-d2c4-4e28-893f-4bd96428ab8b
Roberts, J. Murray
f254ac2d-38cd-44e4-b625-279eab5e06f2
et al.
Johnson, David E.
ac1c7dcb-a817-47bc-aaaa-4a0e268c27d0
Froján, Christopher Barrio
4935e7ee-ac0f-41bd-b00b-2c5806561d74
Neat, Francis
7418a36b-a2b9-4146-9cdc-6ef1456fd836
Van Oevelen, Dick
7a75c2d2-d59c-4f35-a3da-8ff31d375b61
Stirling, David
db96211a-7560-4857-a747-407ae5be25ea
Gubbins, Matthew J.
a9c7d209-d2c4-4e28-893f-4bd96428ab8b
Roberts, J. Murray
f254ac2d-38cd-44e4-b625-279eab5e06f2

Johnson, David E., Froján, Christopher Barrio, Neat, Francis and Van Oevelen, Dick , et al. (2019) Rockall and Hatton: resolving a super wicked marine governance problem in the high seas of the northeast Atlantic Ocean. Frontiers in Marine Science, 6 (2), [69]. (doi:10.3389/fmars.2019.00069).

Record type: Review

Abstract

The Hatton-Rockall plateau in the northeast Atlantic Ocean has long been the subject of interest for fishers, prospectors, conservationists, managers, planners, and politicians. As a feature that straddles national and international waters, it is subject to a multitude of competing and confounding regulations, making the development of a holistic management plan for sustainable use fraught with difficulty. Here, the various stakeholders in the area are collated, together with the rules they have created or must abide by with respect to biodiversity assets, maritime resources, and governance frameworks. Blue Growth envisages optimal use of sea areas, including potential for additional commercial activities. Current research and stakeholder engagement efforts to achieve this integration are described, and the contribution of the EU-funded ATLAS project is analyzed. In particular, more precise, ground-truthed information has the potential to inform systematic conservation planning, providing the basis for sustainable development and improving adaptive management. By scrutinizing and exposing all the elements in this example of a spatially managed area we show how the expectations of each stakeholder can be better managed.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 7 February 2019
Published date: 27 February 2019
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2019 Johnson, Barrio Froján, Neat, Van Oevelen, Stirling, Gubbins and Roberts.
Keywords: Areas beyond national jurisdiction ABNJ, Blue growth, Ecologically or biologically significant area EBSA, Ecosystem approach to fisheries management EAFM, Marine spatial planning MSP

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479872
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479872
ISSN: 2296-7745
PURE UUID: 444631a3-20f4-4cc9-857f-3083e9322a9d
ORCID for Christopher Barrio Froján: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5562-5508

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 28 Jul 2023 16:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:19

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Contributors

Author: David E. Johnson
Author: Christopher Barrio Froján ORCID iD
Author: Francis Neat
Author: Dick Van Oevelen
Author: David Stirling
Author: Matthew J. Gubbins
Author: J. Murray Roberts
Corporate Author: et al.

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