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On 8th of July 2015 a group of 13 people came together in London as part of the Marine CoLABoration. There were two main purposes for the workshop: to clarify what has been learnt from the experiments and to introduce collbaorative processes to enable these (or similar) experiments to be used as a foundation for larger, longer term projects, using an iterative, experimental approach.

Photos from the workshops can be found at https://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/sets/72157650383972831

Louisa Hooper, Sarah Ridley, Sandy Luk, Andrew Farmer, Heather Koldewey, Aniol Esteban, Giles Bristow, Amy Pryor, Nicola Frost, Sue Ranger, Mirella von Lindenfels.

Facilitators: Vali Lalioti, Nik Gaffney

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a brief update on currently active and recently launched initiatives

We reviewed the progress and conclusions from three experiments; Transparency of Marine Industries and blue divestment, Plastic pollution from a systems change perspective and Game On!.

The Transparency of Marine Industries initiative sought to test the ideas around using transparency as a tool to improve the marine environment. The focus was on mapping existing initiatives, checking the availability of data sources & looking at what data may be required for informed decision making. What information is available? an overwhelming amount, making it practically impossible to look at everything. reducing the scope to include available shipping & fisheries data, the conclusion was that info is available, there are still significant gaps since technology is not always good enough to identify illegal fishing (for example). If data is available, it may not always used or discrepancies followed up. shipping data is patchy in places

The group is optimistic, but still somewhat confused about the scope and depth of the issues. Divestment in seafood companies with poor environmental and legal commitments is seen as viable (especially via pension funds) and there are several ideas about using financial sector as lever. While there are groups currently involved in divestment programmes, there is a concern that it may not be systemic enough, various initiatives could be brought together. There are good signs for financing opportunities as several investment companies are interested in fisheries reform (fisheries reform report. ref. heather). Scope for open data experiments. does open data, access & hacking a public API lead to new & unexpected results?

conclusion; system mapping was important to understand scope, problems and new requirements. better data, better use of data, new data required.

challenges;

  • further diagnostics
  • crystallise objective → perhaps focus on IUU (Illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing)
  • identify actors (e.g. financiers, consumers, supply chains)
  • impact diagnostics (where can impacts occur. e.g. fleet size, regions, etc)
  • what is the shared toolkit?

next steps;

  • clarify - what is the change in the marine system which wish to see?
  • identify & connect with external actors to involve
  • identify some of the 'keystone' companies which have 'disproportionate effects on marine environment' (ref. nicola)
  • identify and clarify theories of change

work on how enforcement authorities can use the available data for prosecution

  • Retrocasting & Extrapolation.
  • Outcome Pathways Design.
  • Evaluation. (what, so what, now what?)
  • critical thinking (6 hats).
  • marine_colab/workshop_201507.1436538917.txt.gz
  • Last modified: 2015-07-10 14:35
  • by nik