Abstract

Recently, oceans have become the focus of substantial global attention and diverse appeals for “transformation.” Calls to transform ocean governance are motivated by various objectives, including the need to secure the rights of marginalized coastal communities, to boost ocean-based economic development, and to reverse global biodiversity loss. This paper examines the politics of ocean governance transformations through an analysis of three ongoing cases: the FAO’s voluntary guidelines for small-scale fisheries; debt-for-“blue”-nature swaps in the Seychelles; and the United Nations’ negotiations for a high seas’ treaty. We find that transformations are not inevitable or apolitical. Rather, changes are driven by an array of actors with different objectives and varying degrees of power. Objectives are articulated and negotiated through interactions thatmayreassemble rights, access, and control; however, there is also the potential that existing conditions become further entrenched rather than transformed at all. In particular, our analysis suggests that: (1) efforts to transform are situated in contested, historical landscapes that bias the trajectory of transformation, (2) power dynamics shape whose agendas and narratives drive transformational change, and (3) transformations create uneven distributions of costs and benefits that can facilitate or stall progress toward intended goals. As competing interests over ocean spaces continue to grow in the coming decades, understanding the processes through which ocean governance transformations can occur—and making the politics of transformative change more explicit—will be critical for realizing equitable ocean governance.

Highlights

  • Calls to transform oceans and ocean governance are growing louder and more expansive in scope (Campbell et al, 2016)

  • We describe the conditions that enabled ocean governance transformations in three ongoing cases: (1) the Food and Agricultural Organization’s (FAO) Voluntary Guidelines for Securing Sustainable Small-Scale Fisheries in the Context of Food Security and Poverty Eradication (“the SSF Guidelines”), (2) debt-for-“blue”-nature swaps in the Seychelles, and (3) the United Nations’ (UN) negotiations for a legally binding treaty to govern the high seas

  • We explore the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO)-led Voluntary Guidelines for Securing Sustainable Small-Scale Fisheries in the Context of Food Security and Poverty, which illustrates an international scale transformation toward rights-based governance that is moving into the resilience building phase (Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), 2015c)

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Summary

Introduction

Calls to transform oceans and ocean governance are growing louder and more expansive in scope (Campbell et al, 2016). The idea of incremental change is being cast aside in favor of largescale transformation (Rudolph et al, 2020). Given this context, critical questions about what characterizes transformation and how efforts are being undertaken in pursuit of governance transformation need to be addressed. Critical questions about what characterizes transformation and how efforts are being undertaken in pursuit of governance transformation need to be addressed Such widespread calls for initiating transformations raises questions as to whether everything is a transformation; whether there are analytical stages through which transformations can be understood and qualified

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