4.5 Article

Connecting to the oceans: supporting ocean literacy and public engagement

Journal

REVIEWS IN FISH BIOLOGY AND FISHERIES
Volume 32, Issue 1, Pages 123-143

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11160-020-09625-9

Keywords

Communication; Education; Future seas; Interdisciplinary; Ocean literacy; Sustainable 2030

Funding

  1. Centre for Marine Socioecology
  2. IMAS
  3. CSIRO
  4. MENZIES
  5. College of Arts, Law and Education
  6. College of Science and Engineering at UTAS
  7. Snowchange from Finland
  8. DVCR Office at UTAS
  9. ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate Extremes [CE170100023]
  10. Australian Research Council

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Enhancing public understanding of the ocean and fostering connections with the ocean is crucial for achieving sustainable ocean management by 2030. Through education, cultural connections, technological developments, and knowledge exchange, it is possible to improve perceptions of the ocean and garner wider societal support for effective ocean conservation.
Improved public understanding of the ocean and the importance of sustainable ocean use, or ocean literacy, is essential for achieving global commitments to sustainable development by 2030 and beyond. However, growing human populations (particularly in mega-cities), urbanisation and socio-economic disparity threaten opportunities for people to engage and connect directly with ocean environments. Thus, a major challenge in engaging the whole of society in achieving ocean sustainability by 2030 is to develop strategies to improve societal connections to the ocean. The concept of ocean literacy reflects public understanding of the ocean, but is also an indication of connections to, and attitudes and behaviours towards, the ocean. Improving and progressing global ocean literacy has potential to catalyse the behaviour changes necessary for achieving a sustainable future. As part of the Future Seas project (https://futureseas2030.org/), this paper aims to synthesise knowledge and perspectives on ocean literacy from a range of disciplines, including but not exclusive to marine biology, socio-ecology, philosophy, technology, psychology, oceanography and human health. Using examples from the literature, we outline the potential for positive change towards a sustainable future based on knowledge that already exists. We focus on four drivers that can influence and improve ocean literacy and societal connections to the ocean: (1) education, (2) cultural connections, (3) technological developments, and (4) knowledge exchange and science-policy interconnections. We explore how each driver plays a role in improving perceptions of the ocean to engender more widespread societal support for effective ocean management and conservation. In doing so, we develop an ocean literacy toolkit, a practical resource for enhancing ocean connections across a broad range of contexts worldwide.

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