A New Paradigm for Social License as a Path to Marine Sustainability

被引:10
|
作者
Uffman-Kirsch, Lisa B. [1 ,2 ]
Richardson, Benjamin J. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
van Putten, Elizabeth Ingrid [2 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Tasmania, Fac Law, Hobart, Tas, Australia
[2] Univ Tasmania, Ctr Marine Socioecol, Hobart, Tas, Australia
[3] Univ Tasmania, Inst Marine & Antarctic Studies, Hobart, Tas, Australia
[4] Commonwealth Sci & Ind Res Org, Oceans & Atmosphere, Hobart, Tas, Australia
关键词
marine governance; free; prior; and informed consent; public participation; public trust doctrine; social license to engage; stakeholder decision making; stakeholder deliberation; social license to operate; INDIGENOUS PEOPLES; PARTICIPATION; RIGHTS;
D O I
10.3389/fmars.2020.571373
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Traditional marine governance can create inferior results. Management decisions customarily reflect fluctuating political priorities and formidable special-interest influence. Governments face distrust and conflicts of interest. Industries face fluctuating or confusing rules. Communities feel disenfranchised to affect change. The marine environment exhibits the impacts. While perceived harm to diverse values and priorities, disputed facts and legal questions create conflict, informed and empowered public engagement prepares governments to forge socially legitimate and environmentally acceptable decisions. Integrity, transparency and inclusiveness matter. This article examines positive contributions engaged communities can make to marine governance and relates it to social license. Social license suffers critique as vague and manufactured. Here its traditional understanding as extra-legal approval that communities give to resource choices is broadened to include a legally sanctioned power to deliberate- social license to engage. The starting hypothesis rests in the legal tradition designating oceans as public assets for which governments hold fiduciary duties of sustainable management benefiting current and future generations. The public trust doctrine houses this legal custom. A procedural due process right for engaged communities should stem from this public-asset classification and afford marine stakeholders standing to ensure management policy accords with doctrinal principles. The (free), prior, informed consent participation standard provides best practice for engaged decision-making. Building on theories from law, social, and political science, we suggest robust public deliberation provides marine use actors methods to earn and sustain their social license to operate, while governmental legitimacy is bolstered by assuring public engagement opportunities are available and protected with outcomes utilized.
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收藏
页数:6
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