posted on 2025-08-01, 08:22authored byC Phoenix, SL Bell, J Hollenbeck
There is a growing body of research signalling the health and wellbeing benefits of being in
blue space. Here, we advance this intellectual agenda by critically examining perceptions
and experiences of coastal blue space among residents of a disadvantaged, predominantly
African-American community who report limited engagement with their local coastal blue
space, despite beachgoing being considered mainstream by a previous generation. Drawing
on focus group data and sensitised to a range of theoretical perspectives aligned with race,
space and social class, we advance theoretical and empirical knowledge pertaining to blue
space engagement. In doing so, we demonstrate the need for more critically informed,
theoretically appropriate research in this area, which connects individual stories of the sea
to the wider historical, social and political settings in which relationships with blue space are
framed and produced.
Funding
European Regional Development Fund Programme 2007-2013
European Social Fund Convergence Programme for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly
NIEHS P50 ES12736
NSF 0CE0432368/0911373
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) Oceans and Human Health Center, University of Miami Rosenstiel School