2014 07 steve fletcher

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The Future of Coastal Partnerships Dr Steve Fletcher Director, Centre for Marine and Coastal Policy Research, Plymouth University [email protected] Twitter: @drsfletcher Co-authors: Ben Anderson, Caroline Salthouse, Niall Benson coastal partnerships will not survive if things continue on the same path” (Coastal Partnership Officer, May 2014) Torcross, Devon

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Page 1: 2014   07 steve fletcher

The Future of Coastal Partnerships

Dr Steve Fletcher Director, Centre for Marine and Coastal Policy Research, Plymouth University [email protected] Twitter: @drsfletcher

Co-authors: Ben Anderson, Caroline Salthouse, Niall Benson

“coastal partnerships will not survive if things continue on the same path”

(Coastal Partnership Officer, May 2014)

Torcross, Devon

Page 2: 2014   07 steve fletcher

International, European and

English legislation protecting

the marine environment

(Boyes and Elliott, 2014).

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Benefits of coastal partnerships (MMO, 2013):

- stakeholder engagement and consultation

- awareness-raising and networking

- bringing sectors together at the land sea interface

- provision of information and data;

- neutral facilitation of fair and open debate

- inform planning, policy and legislation;

- effective dissemination of relevant information.

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But it was also noted by MMO (2013) that: fragmented spatial coverage and diverse communication channels mean that no mechanism exists for coastal partnerships to communicate to all coastal stakeholders in a comprehensive and consistent manner, which would be important to support a national role (for example in marine planning).

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Research approach

Survey of coastal partnership officers – context setting

• Invitations sent using CPN database

• 36 partnerships represented

• UK coverage (mostly Scotland and England)

Workshop - testing ideas

• June 2014 , Plymouth.

• 28 participants

• Local government, industry, research, regulators, UK/EU

Follow-up interviews - reality checking

• Ongoing

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Partnership

Process

Economic Environmental

External The Future of

Coastal

Partnerships

Social

Themes within survey responses

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Past

Successes

Current

Challenges

Economic

Partnership

Process

External

factors

Social

Environmental

Future

Challenges

Future

Opportunities

Figure 1: Bubble schematic shows the relative percentage of occurrence, represented by the bubble diameter, of the five

general themes identified by survey respondents through the Successes, Current Challenges, Future Challenges and

Opportunities sections.

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Successes of coastal partnerships

0 5 10 15 20 25

Project work

Collaboration

Profile raising of CP

CP development

Marine citizenship

Representation

Facilitation

Legislation involvement

Research

Funding Staff

Management plan

Resourcefulness

Neutrality

Project funding

Sustainable development

Recognition of CP

CPN

Marine conservation…

Number of Responses

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Future opportunities for coastal partnerships

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20

Legislation involvement

New funding streams

CP development

Project funding

Marine citizenship

Marine environment legislation

European driven

Recognition of CP

Collaboration with another CP

Continuity

Broader CP membership

Profile raising of CP

CPN

Increased private sector rep

Management plan

Environmental protection

Terestrial integration

Professionalism

Consultancy

Staffing funding

40

Number of responses

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Future role of partnerships (from partnership officers):

• Take on the duties of partners (at lower cost) to deliver integration “taking on statutory and enforcement functions”

• Undertake more project-based work “that is where the funding comes from now”

• Reflect wider policy changes and objectives “any change will presumably be led by government and so we seem to be dependent on policy from above”

• Reflect local needs and financial necessities “partnerships may adjust to reflect changes in local issues” / “we need to become mini -consultancies”

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Workshop results: role of coastal partnerships?

Overcome fragmented governance

“if there is a need for coastal partnerships, it is now”.

Support marine planning

strong “potential “role / current engagement limited (“insulting”)

One stop shop

single communication and information hub

What’s in a label?

It is the social and institutional capital that counts

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What does all this mean for…

• integration across the land/sea interface?

• cross-border issues?

• co-location opportunities?

• managing conflicts for space?

• engaging in planning and policy processes?

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Conclusion: role(s) for coastal partnerships

• Supporting the delivery of key legislation

• Sharing evidence to support shared decisions

• Managing networks that facilitate collaboration

• Providing open communication channels

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Dr Steve Fletcher Director, Centre for Marine and Coastal Policy Research Plymouth University [email protected] Twitter: @drsfletcher

Centre for Marine and Coastal Research:

Web: www.plymouth.ac.uk/research/marcopol

Twitter: @MarCoPolPU

Email: [email protected]

Torcross, Devon