Coproduction of marine restoration with communities facilitates stronger outcomes
Richard K.F. Unsworth, Leanne C. Cullen-Unsworth, Emma Fox, Benjamin L.H. Jones, Flo Taylor, Sue Burton, Jetske Germing, Ricardo Zanre, Manuela Amone-Mabuto, Shane Mc Guinness

TL;DR
Working with local communities and stakeholders in marine restoration leads to better ecological and social outcomes.
Contribution
Demonstrates the value of co-producing marine restoration projects with communities for long-term success.
Findings
Co-producing marine restoration with communities leads to stronger ecological outcomes.
Early stakeholder engagement is crucial for project success and sustainability.
Restoration projects must be relevant and beneficial to local people to ensure support.
Abstract
Near-shore marine habitats are well-documented as diverse and productive social-ecological systems; their degradation and loss have led to growing interest in marine restoration. However, the literature offers limited consideration of the interactions between these projects and stakeholders and local communities. We present a case study showing how a stakeholder engagement strategy ultimately led to the co-production of a marine restoration project among scientists, stakeholders and local communities. Alongside biological recovery, we present the complex social, logistical and ecological lessons learned through this stakeholder engagement strategy. Principally, these relate to how the success of the project hinged on the point at which the project was co-developed with the input of local communities and strategic stakeholders, rather than in a disconnected, independent manner. This…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCoral and Marine Ecosystems Studies · Coastal and Marine Management · Marine and coastal plant biology
