Exploring the challenges of integrated coastal zone management and reflecting on contributions to 'integration' from geographical thought.

Article


McFadden, L. 2008. Exploring the challenges of integrated coastal zone management and reflecting on contributions to 'integration' from geographical thought. The Geographical Journal. 174 (4), pp. 299-314. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4959.2008.00301.x
TypeArticle
TitleExploring the challenges of integrated coastal zone management and reflecting on contributions to 'integration' from geographical thought.
AuthorsMcFadden, L.
Abstract

Integrated coastal zone management (ICZM) is a challenging process, defined by stakeholder engagement and underpinned by knowledge on the integrated behaviour of coastal systems. While significant advancements in ICZM have been made, a range of difficult and important questions about 'integration' remain to be explored. This paper discusses opportunities for addressing such challenges of integration through the application of geographical thinking to understanding and managing coastal environments. It focuses on geographical traditions on systems thinking, the process-based nature of geographic research and geographical contributions to conceptualising place and our relationships to it. Using UK-based case studies the paper explores integration challenges from three different coastal contexts and management perspectives, examining: adaptation through managed realignment in a local community, integrated flood risk management in London and the Thames Estuary and enhancing the 'socially just' nature of coastal management. The case-study discussion highlights the importance of 'geographical thought' to improving the integrative basis of strategies for managing complex coastal environments. This paper argues that 'thinking geographically' is one logical vehicle for increasing our understanding of, and providing solutions to, barriers which limit progress towards greater 'integration' in coastal management. Geography is dynamic, plural and based on the recognition that reality is contested and as such geographical ideas could add considerably to emerging cross-disciplinary knowledge on the interactions and interdependencies of behaviours within coastal systems.

KeywordsICZM; systems thinking; space–time; community; adaptation; geography
PublisherWiley
The Royal Geographical Society
Institute of British Geographers
JournalThe Geographical Journal
ISSN0016-7398
Electronic1475-4959
Publication dates
Print31 Oct 2008
Publication process dates
Deposited16 Apr 2010
Output statusPublished
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4959.2008.00301.x
LanguageEnglish
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