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100 Opportunities for More Inclusive Ocean Research: Cross-Disciplinary Research Questions for Sustainable Ocean Governance and Management

Frontiers in Marine Science 2020 59 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Erin V. Satterthwaite, Murray A. Rudd Stephen Fletcher, Mary S. Wisz, Stephen Fletcher, Andrei Polejack, Stephen Fletcher, Erin V. Satterthwaite, Maree Fudge, Mibu Fischer, Andrei Polejack, Stephen Fletcher, Andrei Polejack, Michael St. John, Murray A. Rudd Murray A. Rudd Michael St. John, Michael St. John, Michael St. John, Mibu Fischer, Mibu Fischer, Stephen Fletcher, Murray A. Rudd Murray A. Rudd Michael St. John, Andrei Polejack, Murray A. Rudd Murray A. Rudd

Summary

This paper synthesizes cross-disciplinary research questions from major ocean science and policy scanning exercises, producing a list of 100 questions that require collaborative approaches to inform sustainable ocean governance. Topics range from coastal environmental change to marine technology and socioeconomic innovation as they relate to ocean health.

Study Type Environmental

In order to inform decision making and policy, research to address sustainability challenges requires cross-disciplinary approaches that are co-created with a wide and inclusive diversity of disciplines and stakeholders. As the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development approaches, it is therefore timely to take stock of the global range of cross-disciplinary questions to inform the development of policies to restore and sustain ocean health. We synthesized questions from major science and policy horizon scanning exercises, identifying 89 questions with relevance for ocean policy and governance. We then scanned the broad ocean science literature to examine issues potentially missed in the horizon scans and supplemented the horizon scan outcome with 11 additional questions. This resulted in an unprioritized list of 100 general questions that would require a cross-disciplinary approach to inform policy. The questions fell into broad categories including: coastal and marine environmental change, managing ocean activities, governance for sustainable oceans, ocean value, and technological and socio-economic innovation. Each question can be customized by ecosystem, region, scale, and socio-political context, and is intended to inspire discussions of salient cross-disciplinary research directions to direct scientific research that will inform policies. Governance and management responses to these questions will best be informed by drawing upon a diversity of natural and social sciences, local and traditional knowledge, and engagement of different sectors and stakeholders.

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