Coastal regions are essential to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) given their importance for human habitation, resource provisioning, employment, and cultural practice. They are also regions where different ecological, disciplinary, and jurisdictional boundaries both overlap and are obscured. We thus propose the landsea interface as areas where governance systems are most in need of frameworks for systems analysis to meet the SDGs—which are inherently interconnected— and integrate complex interdependencies between human livelihoods, energy, transport, food production, and nutrient flows (among others). We propose a strategic landsea governance framework built on the sustainable transitions literature to plan for governance to achieve sustainable development across the land-sea interface. To illustrate our proposal, we compare governance planning processes across four casebased scenarios: an industrialized coastal country, a least developed coastal country, a developing coastal country with local dependencies on ocean resources, and a small island developing state primarily dependent on tourism. Through the lens of aligning governance actors and actions vertically (subnational to national), horizontally (across sectors), and programmatically (from goals to implementation), we propose scales at which governance systems may be misaligned, such as where different agencies that affect marine systems have conflicting visions and goals, leading to stalled progress or counterproductive actions. Where possible, we also highlight strategies to align across scales of high level strategic policy, tactical scale institutional mandates and cooperation, and on the ground activities and operations, such as aligning actors based on an analysis of interdependencies of goals.
History
Publication title
Frontiers in Marine Science
Volume
8
Article number
709947
Number
709947
Pagination
1-11
ISSN
2296-7745
Department/School
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies
Publisher
Frontiers Research Foundation
Place of publication
Switzerland
Rights statement
Copyright 2021 Singh, Cottrell, Eddy and Cisneros-Montemayor. This is an openaccess article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). T
Repository Status
Open
Socio-economic Objectives
Assessment and management of coastal and estuarine ecosystems; Marine systems and management not elsewhere classified; Other environmental management not elsewhere classified