TY - JOUR
T1 - The Politics of Amphibiousness
T2 - Shifting Coastal Management in the Netherlands
AU - Meesters, Marieke
AU - Pauwelussen, Annet
AU - Turnhout, Esther
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/4/9
Y1 - 2024/4/9
N2 - This paper explores the consequences of a shift in Dutch coastal management. The management approach transitioned from aiming to keep the sea at bay toward the stimulation of dynamic sea-land relations. This shift toward “dynamic management” can be seen as part of wider trends in both ecological and science, technology, and society thinking on coasts as amphibious more-than-human entanglements. We draw on a case study of the Wadden Sea barrier island Ameland to develop the notion of amphibious response-ability. We show that while dynamic management enabled amphibiousness in the land–sea interface, it limited other types of amphibiousness, with consequences for the possibilities to respond to coastal changes. These consequences for amphibious response-abilities became critical when rapid coastal erosion threatened and partially destroyed a gas platform. Our case shows that even when coastal management regimes are amphibious because they unleash and build on natural processes, they can still have harmful consequences, and they can in fact limit the possibilities for integrated responses to coastal change. We conclude by suggesting that heterogeneous knowledge alliances are needed to expose and work with the politics of (amphibious) coastal management regimes.
AB - This paper explores the consequences of a shift in Dutch coastal management. The management approach transitioned from aiming to keep the sea at bay toward the stimulation of dynamic sea-land relations. This shift toward “dynamic management” can be seen as part of wider trends in both ecological and science, technology, and society thinking on coasts as amphibious more-than-human entanglements. We draw on a case study of the Wadden Sea barrier island Ameland to develop the notion of amphibious response-ability. We show that while dynamic management enabled amphibiousness in the land–sea interface, it limited other types of amphibiousness, with consequences for the possibilities to respond to coastal changes. These consequences for amphibious response-abilities became critical when rapid coastal erosion threatened and partially destroyed a gas platform. Our case shows that even when coastal management regimes are amphibious because they unleash and build on natural processes, they can still have harmful consequences, and they can in fact limit the possibilities for integrated responses to coastal change. We conclude by suggesting that heterogeneous knowledge alliances are needed to expose and work with the politics of (amphibious) coastal management regimes.
KW - amphibiousness
KW - dynamic management
KW - mining remediation
KW - response-ability
KW - Wadden Sea
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85190425056&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/01622439241239768
DO - 10.1177/01622439241239768
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85190425056
SN - 0162-2439
JO - Science Technology and Human Values
JF - Science Technology and Human Values
ER -