Contextualising coastal management and adaptation: Examining situated practices and path dependencies in Ireland and Germany

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Standard

Contextualising coastal management and adaptation: Examining situated practices and path dependencies in Ireland and Germany. / Tubridy, Fiadh; Walsh, Cormac; Lennon, Mick et al.
In: Ocean and Coastal Management, Vol. 220, 106095, 01.04.2022.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{331f8129b1134a809793c0cf28664ea0,
title = "Contextualising coastal management and adaptation: Examining situated practices and path dependencies in Ireland and Germany",
abstract = "In the context of climate change, coastal areas around the world face multiple interrelated challenges. A range of {\textquoteleft}international best practice{\textquoteright} approaches have been proposed to address these, including concepts such as integrated coastal zone management, ecosystem-based management and managed retreat. However, such supposedly mobile and transferable approaches often fail to properly account for the differences between local contexts, leading to implementation failures. In response, this paper mobilises the conceptual lenses of {\textquoteleft}situated practices{\textquoteright} and {\textquoteleft}path dependencies{\textquoteright} to demonstrate how the emergence and evolution of approaches to planning in coastal communities can generate policy trajectories that constrain the latitude for alternative options. The paper explores the trajectories of coastal planning on the island of Sylt in Germany and Castlemaine Harbour in Ireland. It identifies important path dependencies associated with institutional inertia, collective memories of past hazards and management strategies, the legacies of previous coastal management measures and of coastal development, and the importance of property relations. Overall, the analysis highlights the importance of appreciating the local and historical distinctiveness of coastal areas and communities. It shows that critical attention to context and creating inclusive fora for debate is required to advance climate change adaptation measures that offer opportunities to unlock historically anchored path dependencies which hamper flexibility and reduce resilience.",
keywords = "Climate change adaptation, Coastal management, Germany, Ireland, Geography, Sustainability Governance",
author = "Fiadh Tubridy and Cormac Walsh and Mick Lennon and Mark Scott",
note = "This work was supported by the Irish Centre for Applied Geosciences/ Science Foundation Ireland under Science Foundation Ireland Grant 13/RC2092 ",
year = "2022",
month = apr,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2022.106095",
language = "English",
volume = "220",
journal = "Ocean and Coastal Management",
issn = "0964-5691",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Contextualising coastal management and adaptation

T2 - Examining situated practices and path dependencies in Ireland and Germany

AU - Tubridy, Fiadh

AU - Walsh, Cormac

AU - Lennon, Mick

AU - Scott, Mark

N1 - This work was supported by the Irish Centre for Applied Geosciences/ Science Foundation Ireland under Science Foundation Ireland Grant 13/RC2092

PY - 2022/4/1

Y1 - 2022/4/1

N2 - In the context of climate change, coastal areas around the world face multiple interrelated challenges. A range of ‘international best practice’ approaches have been proposed to address these, including concepts such as integrated coastal zone management, ecosystem-based management and managed retreat. However, such supposedly mobile and transferable approaches often fail to properly account for the differences between local contexts, leading to implementation failures. In response, this paper mobilises the conceptual lenses of ‘situated practices’ and ‘path dependencies’ to demonstrate how the emergence and evolution of approaches to planning in coastal communities can generate policy trajectories that constrain the latitude for alternative options. The paper explores the trajectories of coastal planning on the island of Sylt in Germany and Castlemaine Harbour in Ireland. It identifies important path dependencies associated with institutional inertia, collective memories of past hazards and management strategies, the legacies of previous coastal management measures and of coastal development, and the importance of property relations. Overall, the analysis highlights the importance of appreciating the local and historical distinctiveness of coastal areas and communities. It shows that critical attention to context and creating inclusive fora for debate is required to advance climate change adaptation measures that offer opportunities to unlock historically anchored path dependencies which hamper flexibility and reduce resilience.

AB - In the context of climate change, coastal areas around the world face multiple interrelated challenges. A range of ‘international best practice’ approaches have been proposed to address these, including concepts such as integrated coastal zone management, ecosystem-based management and managed retreat. However, such supposedly mobile and transferable approaches often fail to properly account for the differences between local contexts, leading to implementation failures. In response, this paper mobilises the conceptual lenses of ‘situated practices’ and ‘path dependencies’ to demonstrate how the emergence and evolution of approaches to planning in coastal communities can generate policy trajectories that constrain the latitude for alternative options. The paper explores the trajectories of coastal planning on the island of Sylt in Germany and Castlemaine Harbour in Ireland. It identifies important path dependencies associated with institutional inertia, collective memories of past hazards and management strategies, the legacies of previous coastal management measures and of coastal development, and the importance of property relations. Overall, the analysis highlights the importance of appreciating the local and historical distinctiveness of coastal areas and communities. It shows that critical attention to context and creating inclusive fora for debate is required to advance climate change adaptation measures that offer opportunities to unlock historically anchored path dependencies which hamper flexibility and reduce resilience.

KW - Climate change adaptation

KW - Coastal management

KW - Germany

KW - Ireland

KW - Geography

KW - Sustainability Governance

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85124706552&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2022.106095

DO - 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2022.106095

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:85124706552

VL - 220

JO - Ocean and Coastal Management

JF - Ocean and Coastal Management

SN - 0964-5691

M1 - 106095

ER -

Recently viewed

Publications

  1. The competition rules applying to the relationship between a minority shareholder and the joint venture
  2. Führt Selbstüberschätzung des CEO zu einer sinkenden Rechnungslegungsqualität und zu negativen Marktreaktionen?
  3. Evaluation of the toxic effects of four anti-cancer drugs in plant bioassays and its potency for screening in the context of waste water reuse for irrigation
  4. Kulturelle Diversität und Gruppenkohäsion in interkulturellen Projektteams einer Organisation der Vereinten Nationen
  5. Dissipation and recycling
  6. Kosten-Nutzen-Analyse
  7. How does sustainability become professionally relevant?
  8. Captopril and its dimer captopril disulfide
  9. Who is responsible for corruption?
  10. Begleitung von Lehrenden bei der Implementierung von Forschendem Lernen
  11. What influences environmental entrepreneurship? A multilevel analysis of the determinants of entrepreneurs’ environmental orientation
  12. Modellversuchsforschung reloaded
  13. Effects of habitat heterogeneity on bird communities in forests of northeastern Germany
  14. Interactions between species richness, herbivory and precipitation affect standing biomass in Mongolian rangelands
  15. Effects of free-air CO 2 enrichment and nitrogen supply on grain quality parameters and elemental composition of wheat and barley grown in a crop rotation
  16. Functional complementarity and specialisation
  17. Digitalisierung – Musik – Unterricht
  18. Einführende Überlegungen zur Allfinanz-Entwicklung
  19. Entrepreneurial Traits, Entrepreneurial Orientation, and Innovation in the Performance of Owner-Manager Led Firms: A Meta-analysis
  20. An Estimation of the Total Benefit Value of the British Countryside for Recreational Activities
  21. Exports and productivity in Germany
  22. Review: The dark side of relict species biology
  23. Neue deutsche Härte
  24. Modifying Our Society With Law:
  25. Die Enden des Kabels