Towards a 'theory of change' for ocean plastics: a socio-oceanography approach to the global challenge of plastic pollution.

Microplastics and nanoplastics Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-05-13 DOI:10.1186/s43591-025-00127-8
Alice A Horton, Lesley Henderson, Cressida Bowyer, Winnie Courtene-Jones, Samantha L Garrard, Nieke Monika Kulsum, Deirdre McKay, Imali Manikarachchige, Sreejith Sreekumar, Thomas Stanton
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Socio-oceanography is an emerging field which mobilises insights from natural and social sciences to explore the inter-connectedness of societal relationships with the ocean and to adopt a holistic approach to solving key oceanographic and societal challenges. It is within this specific context that we explore and reflect upon diverse communities in relation to engaging with plastic pollution in the ocean, one of the foremost socio-environmental challenges of our time. We establish definitions of 'community', arguing that communities are not 'out there' waiting to be engaged with but are dynamic and (re)constituted in four key contexts - geographical, practical, virtual, and circumstantial. We outline some 'rules of engagement' and draw upon several international case studies in the context of plastic pollution to evidence and emphasise the value of working with members of diverse communities to better address socio-oceanographic challenges. In the context of plastic pollution, communities have a vital role to play in terms of co-creating knowledge, lived experience, diverse expertise, and agency to bring about social change. Given the ubiquity of plastics in our day-to-day lives, and subsequently as an environmental pollutant, no community is unaffected by this issue. Relating to socio-oceanography, we argue that structural power imbalances in terms of how diverse communities and natural scientists are traditionally positioned within academic research mean that 'formal' scientific knowledge is frequently privileged, and members of communities risk being positioned as 'empty vessels'. Moving away from this 'deficit' model where knowledge is simply transferred or alternatively extracted from communities allows us to progress towards an inclusive 'socio-oceanography in society' approach, where members of communities are valued as vital in prioritising and addressing socio-oceanography issues which affect everyday life. Accessibility, openness, ethics and fairness in data are also essential in ensuring that research outcomes can be applied widely outside the academic community.

Graphical abstract:

迈向海洋塑料的“变化理论”:应对塑料污染全球挑战的社会海洋学方法。
社会海洋学是一个新兴领域,它利用自然科学和社会科学的见解来探索与海洋的社会关系的相互联系,并采用整体方法来解决关键的海洋学和社会挑战。正是在这一特定背景下,我们探索和反思了与海洋塑料污染有关的不同社区,这是我们这个时代最重要的社会环境挑战之一。我们建立了“社区”的定义,认为社区不是“在那里”等待参与,而是动态的,并在四个关键环境中(地理、实际、虚拟和环境)构成。我们概述了一些“参与规则”,并借鉴了塑料污染背景下的几个国际案例研究作为证据,并强调与不同社区成员合作以更好地应对社会海洋学挑战的价值。在塑料污染的背景下,社区在共同创造知识、生活经验、多样化专业知识和推动社会变革方面发挥着至关重要的作用。鉴于塑料在我们的日常生活中无处不在,并随后成为一种环境污染物,没有一个社区不受这个问题的影响。关于社会海洋学,我们认为,就不同的社区和自然科学家在学术研究中的传统定位而言,结构性权力失衡意味着“正式的”科学知识经常享有特权,社区成员有被定位为“空船”的风险。摆脱这种简单地转移或从社区中提取知识的“赤字”模式,使我们能够朝着包容性的“社会中的社会海洋学”方法迈进,在这种方法中,社区成员在优先考虑和解决影响日常生活的社会海洋学问题方面被视为至关重要的。数据的可获取性、公开性、伦理性和公平性对于确保研究成果在学术界之外得到广泛应用也至关重要。图形化的简介:
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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