2019
DOI: 10.1177/0263775818822829
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Ocean data portals: Performing a new infrastructure for ocean governance

Abstract: We are currently in what might be termed a “third phase” of ocean enclosures around the world. This phase has involved an unprecedented intensity of map-making that supports an emerging regime of ocean governance where resources are geocoded, multiple and disparate marine uses are weighed against each other, spatial tradeoffs are made, and exclusive rights to spaces and resources are established. The discourse and practice of marine spatial planning inform the contours of this emerging regime. This paper exami… Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(28 citation statements)
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References 60 publications
(80 reference statements)
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“…Their capacity to produce such knowledge could be enhanced through citizen science (Nursey-Bray, Palmer, & Pecl, 2018;Kelly, Flemming, Pecl, Ritcher, & Bonn. 2019) and participatory mapping (Boucquey, St Martin, Fairbanks, Campbell, & Wise, 2019) projects that would enable them to provide alternative data to the technocratic, top-down forms of data collection. Attention to inclusive decision-making processes that confront issues of social justice is essential to achieving sustainable ocean management across sectors and jurisdictions (Bennett, 2018).…”
Section: Discussion and Development Of Disruptive Alternativesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their capacity to produce such knowledge could be enhanced through citizen science (Nursey-Bray, Palmer, & Pecl, 2018;Kelly, Flemming, Pecl, Ritcher, & Bonn. 2019) and participatory mapping (Boucquey, St Martin, Fairbanks, Campbell, & Wise, 2019) projects that would enable them to provide alternative data to the technocratic, top-down forms of data collection. Attention to inclusive decision-making processes that confront issues of social justice is essential to achieving sustainable ocean management across sectors and jurisdictions (Bennett, 2018).…”
Section: Discussion and Development Of Disruptive Alternativesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While big environmental data sets present new opportunities for sense‐making in opaque and unwieldy environments, such as the ocean, the growing emphasis on algorithms and machine learning is transforming not only how we claim to know nature, but the very kinds of interventions, infrastructures, regimes of care, and resource governance modalities that become possible (Boucquey et al ; Gabrys ; Lehman ). Big data and algorithmic governance have also infiltrated a site of more commonplace human–environment relations, the farm.…”
Section: The “Rise Of the Robots”mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These might appear as abstract, even stuffy words, irrelevant to the practical work of ocean governance. Yet they allow us to interrogate the very basis of ocean governance and its tools and techniques [10].…”
Section: Ocean Governance In a Vacuum? Setting The Scenementioning
confidence: 99%