A typology of different perspectives on the spatial economic impacts of Marine Spatial Planning
Gustavsson, M; Morrissey, K
Date: 21 October 2019
Journal
Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning
Publisher
Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Marine Spatial Planning aims to create a framework for the oceans and seas that
minimise conflicts between economic activities within the marine environment
while maintaining good environmental status. Although reports by international –
and national – organisations suggest there are economic benefits to Marine
Spatial Planning ...
Marine Spatial Planning aims to create a framework for the oceans and seas that
minimise conflicts between economic activities within the marine environment
while maintaining good environmental status. Although reports by international –
and national – organisations suggest there are economic benefits to Marine
Spatial Planning this analysis has, to date, been aspatial. Employing an
explorative Q methodology approach with ten participants, this paper seeks to
address this spatial and distributive gap by exploring stakeholders (marine
renewable energy, fishing industry, aquaculture and marine tourism) perceptions
of the economic impacts of Marine Spatial Planning across varying (local to
national) geographical scales in the UK. The paper develops a typology of three
different perspectives on the economic impacts of Marine Spatial Planning: the
optimistic ‘place-makers’; the sceptical ‘place-holders’; and the utilitarian ‘placeless’. Findings highlight that participants loading onto a specific ‘type’ cannot
simply be explained by stakeholder categorisation. This research contributes to
the coastal management literature by identifying differing perceptions on the
‘spatial economic impact’ of Marine Spatial Planning by economic actors
utilising marine and coastal areas in the UK.
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