Sea for Society: Difference between revisions
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== | ==GENERAL DESCRIPTION== | ||
< | <p style="font-size:95%">Sea for Society (SFS) engaged stakeholders, citizens and young people in an open and participatory dialogue to share knowledge, forge partnerships and empower society on issues related to the Ocean... | ||
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Sea for Society (SFS) engaged stakeholders, citizens and young people in an open and participatory dialogue to share knowledge, forge partnerships and empower society on issues related to the Ocean. The project used this dialogue as a launchpad for strategic cooperation, while developing and enriching the concept of the "Blue Society", a vision for how Ocean issues can be integrated within economic, environmental and cultural challenges facing society in years to | <br/> | ||
The project used this dialogue as a launchpad for strategic cooperation, while developing and enriching the concept of the "Blue Society", a vision for how Ocean issues can be integrated within economic, environmental and cultural challenges facing society in years to comeSFS was a European Mobilisation and Mutual Learning Action Plan (MMLAP) funded by the European Commission’s DG Research & Innovation under the theme Science in Society. The multidisciplinary partnership brought together 28 partners from 12 countries representing marine research institutes, funding agencies, science museums and aquaria, CSOs, higher education institutes and business networks. | |||
This dialogue began with thorough multi-stakeholder and citizen consultation on ocean issues in Europe. Following initial research, the Sea for Society team developed a cutting-edge methodology and implemented a full-scale consultation process across 9 countries. The data was compiled and analysed in a series of reports feeding into the mobilisation process, drawing up action plans using the insight gained in the consultation.SFS then went on to mobilise marine researchers, socio-economic stakeholders, Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) and individual citizens and youth in a mutual learning, open dialogue to debate key societal questions related to the Ocean, extract cross-cutting issues and propose challenge-driven solutions fostering a sustainable management of marine eco-system services by European citizens. | This dialogue began with thorough multi-stakeholder and citizen consultation on ocean issues in Europe. Following initial research, the Sea for Society team developed a cutting-edge methodology and implemented a full-scale consultation process across 9 countries. The data was compiled and analysed in a series of reports feeding into the mobilisation process, drawing up action plans using the insight gained in the consultation.SFS then went on to mobilise marine researchers, socio-economic stakeholders, Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) and individual citizens and youth in a mutual learning, open dialogue to debate key societal questions related to the Ocean, extract cross-cutting issues and propose challenge-driven solutions fostering a sustainable management of marine eco-system services by European citizens. | ||
From 2012 to 2015, SFS shaped the new concept of "Blue Society" and worked to improve the governance of research related to the oceans and seas, overseen by a Blue Society Expert Group which was launched and managed throughout the project. Communication was a key element, building up to a final event launching the Blue Society concept at the European Parliament. | From 2012 to 2015, SFS shaped the new concept of "Blue Society" and worked to improve the governance of research related to the oceans and seas, overseen by a Blue Society Expert Group which was launched and managed throughout the project. Communication was a key element, building up to a final event launching the Blue Society concept at the European Parliament. | ||
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===Which are the most relevant project outcomes (roadmaps, guidelines, documents, reports, articles, videos etc) in terms of RRI?=== | ===Which are the most relevant project outcomes (roadmaps, guidelines, documents, reports, articles, videos etc) in terms of RRI?=== | ||
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'''Outcome 1:''' Sea for Society Consultation Outcomes | |||
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'''URL:''' [http://seaforsociety.eu/np4/13/ Sea for Society Outcome 1] | |||
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'''Description:''' The Sea for Society Consultation showed that the Barrier Theme ‘Attitudes and Awareness’ (defined as ‘unfounded attitudes and lack of awareness of marine issues’) is perceived as the single biggest obstacle to a sustainable marine ecosystem, both for the EU as a whole and across different EU regions... | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content" style="text-align:justify">The second most influential Barrier Themes identified by stakeholders are ‘Governance and Strategy’ (defined as ‘responsible institutional framework strategies, policy and research for marine ecosystems’) and ‘Knowledge’ (defined as ‘inadequate scientific and general public knowledge’). The overall result is a ‘hierarchy of Barrier Themes’ which allowed the project to identify the ‘Cross Cutting Challenge’ – that is, the effort required to overcome the most influential Barrier Theme in the most effective way and, in turn, help to overcome all the Barriers below it in the hierarchy. Therefore the most important ‘Blue Society Challenge’ for the Sea for Society Project was to ‘Change Attitudes’ and ‘Improve Awareness’ around the issue of marine ecosystem services. Other key outcomes include specific stakeholder recommendations and issue reports by country.</div> | |||
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'''Exploitable by researchers:''' These outcomes provide direct recommendations for lines of research to be taken, and indicate the ways in which researchers can address barriers to a Blue Society directly. | |||
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'''Exploitable by policymakers:''' These outcomes provide direct recommendations for research and governance, and indicate the ways in which policymakers can address barriers to a Blue Society directly. | |||
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'''Exploitable by other stakeholders:''' The outcomes can be used by all stakeholders involved in Ocean issues as a guideline of how to work better together in order to address barriers to a Blue Society. | |||
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|logo=SEAFORSOCIETY.jpg | |logo=SEAFORSOCIETY.jpg | ||
|general_description= | |general_description= | ||
|title=Sea for Society | |||
|duration=2012-2015 | |duration=2012-2015 | ||
|project_coordinator=Manuel Cira, Nausicaa, manuel.cira@nausicaa.fr | |project_coordinator=Manuel Cira, Nausicaa, manuel.cira@nausicaa.fr |
Latest revision as of 14:39, 8 November 2017
GENERAL DESCRIPTIONSea for Society (SFS) engaged stakeholders, citizens and young people in an open and participatory dialogue to share knowledge, forge partnerships and empower society on issues related to the Ocean...
RRI FOCUSIn terms of RRI, what were the main challenges addressed, and to what extent were those challenges met by the project?Expand
Challenge 1 descriptionExpand
How Challenge 1 was addressedExpand
What is the Best Practice for this Challenge?Expand
Name at least one Lesson Learned from this Challenge?Ranking of the most relevant RRI dimensions, where 6 is the most relevant to the project
PROJECT OUTCOMES RELATED TO RRIWhich are the most relevant project outcomes (roadmaps, guidelines, documents, reports, articles, videos etc) in terms of RRI?Expand
Outcome 1: Sea for Society Consultation Outcomes Expand
Description: The Sea for Society Consultation showed that the Barrier Theme ‘Attitudes and Awareness’ (defined as ‘unfounded attitudes and lack of awareness of marine issues’) is perceived as the single biggest obstacle to a sustainable marine ecosystem, both for the EU as a whole and across different EU regions... Expand
Exploitable by researchers: These outcomes provide direct recommendations for lines of research to be taken, and indicate the ways in which researchers can address barriers to a Blue Society directly. Expand
Exploitable by policymakers: These outcomes provide direct recommendations for research and governance, and indicate the ways in which policymakers can address barriers to a Blue Society directly. Expand
Exploitable by other stakeholders: The outcomes can be used by all stakeholders involved in Ocean issues as a guideline of how to work better together in order to address barriers to a Blue Society.
Expand
Outcome 2 TitleExpand
URLExpand
DescriptionExpand
Exploitable by researchersExpand
Exploitable by policymakersExpand
Exploitable by general publicExpand
Exploitable by other stakeholders public
LESSONS LEARNED
The major unexpected challenge of Sea for Society was the wealth of data that the Consultation produced. By entering into dialogue with citizens and stakeholders, we produced extremely valuable content well beyond what we anticipated. The data not only provided solutions to barriers but also gave insight into policy recommendations and many interesting conclusions were drawn by comparing outcomes across geographical areas. As such, the project timeline had to be adapted to make time for additional analysis.
SFS Final Report (to be uploaded)
This project defined the Blue Society concept in a collaborative, multi-stakeholder way, building on the work done at European level by other projects and sparking partnerships and working relationships which continue to be exploited.
POLICY RELATED LESSONS LEARNED
Sea for Society has obtained buy-in from stakeholders and decision-makers at local, national and European level. This has been evidenced through the scale of the attendance at the Blue Society Launch event, the project presence at COP21 and the IUCN World Congress and the synergies achieved with subsequent Horizon 2020 projects such as Sea Change, Columbus and Marina. In terms of European decision- makers, the Maritime Resources and Bioeconomy units of the European Commission’s DG Research have both engaged with the project, as has the DG for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries, and DG MARE’s unit for Maritime policy Atlantic, outermost regions and Arctic.
The main barriers to engaging policymakers were to link national and EU level. Partners have good contacts at national level, and the project worked hard to mobilise the EU level, but linking the two was a challenge. The project addressed this by inviting national policymakers to EU-level events such as the Blue Society Launch.
Sea for Society Summary Report
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