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The Marine CoLAB: Taking a CoLABorative, Values Based Approach to Connect People to the Ocean

Frontiers in Marine Science 2019 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
R. Chambers, Natalie Hart, Sue Ranger, Anna Birney, Corina Angheloiu, J. Alden Loring, Sian Williams, Louisa Hooper

Summary

Nine ocean conservation NGOs collaborated to test whether sharing a common narrative about ocean value would increase public and political support for marine protection. Building broader coalitions and shared messaging around ocean health is important for advancing policies that address plastic pollution in marine environments.

Study Type Environmental

With growing complex and systemic challenges facing the ocean, there is an urgent need to increase the scale and effectiveness of approaches to marine conservation, including protecting and recognising the value of all of its services. Stronger multi-sector networks of organisations are needed, sharing knowledge and working in unison to create a common narrative for the ocean and the solutions to its protection. In an innovative experiment, the Marine CoLABoration (CoLAB) brings together nine non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to explore collaboratively how to communicate more effectively. The CoLAB hypothesises that communicating the full value of the ocean in all its rich diversity connects with people’s deeply held, personal values and leads to more impactful ocean conservation. Through horizon scanning with the wider sector, the CoLAB determines experiment themes to test this hypothesis. These are based predominantly in the UK and include #OneLess, Agents of Change and We are Ocean. The CoLAB’s work demonstrates that by effectively building and promoting an understanding of the full value of the ocean, it is possible to trigger a wider range of human values to catalyse engagement with marine conservation issues. A joined up, interdisciplinary approach to communicating why the ocean matters, engaging a wide range of actors will be crucial in effecting long term, systemic change for the ocean. The need for greater UK ocean literacy has also been highlighted across the CoLAB and its experiments and presents an opportunity for further work.

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