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The plastic pollution crisis: constructing solutions in multilevel policy making
Citation
Vince, JZ, The plastic pollution crisis: constructing solutions in multilevel policy making, Ideas and Crisis Solutions Workshop, 2-3 December 2019, Mebourne, Australia (2019) [Conference Extract]
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Abstract
Marine plastic pollution is a complex problem needing urgent attention as it reaches a crisis point
(Vince and Stoett 2018). Plastics have been found in the most remote parts of the world’s oceans
including the Arctic and Southern Oceans and in the great depths of the Mariana Trench. Plastic
bioaccumulates in filter-feeding marine delicacies such as shrimp, scallops, mussels and sea
cucumbers and the impact on human health and food security is an increasing concern (Ivar do Sul
and Costa 2014; Stoett and Vince 2019). It is predicted that by the year 2050 that the world’s plastic
production will quadruple if current activities around plastic use continue (World Economic Forum et
al. 2016). While this is a global problem that requires global solutions, 80% of the plastic found in the
marine environment is sourced from the land and which is the jurisdiction of nation states and their
state/provincial and local governments. Holistic, integrated, ‘whole of life cycle’ policies, and a
combination of approaches that include regulatory, societal and industry involvement are essential
in addressing this complex issue (Vince and Stoett 2018; Stoett and Vince 2019; Vince and Hardesty
2016; Vince and Hardesty 2018; Haward 2018; Willis et al. 2018). The response to this crisis has
resulted in urgent calls for action on a global scale (Haward 2018; Raubenheimer and McIlgorm
2018). However, in multilevel governance settings on regional and national scales the responses
have been varied and ad hoc. Using the European Union (EU) and Australia as case studies, this
paper will analyse how the urgency of the plastic pollution crisis has shaped multilevel policy
responses and how new governance problems that have emerged from these responses (Maggetti
and Trein 2019) are being addressed. It will also examine the use of ‘placebo policies’ (McConnell
2018) at different levels of governance that are impacting the way other levels are able to address
the crisis.
Item Details
Item Type: | Conference Extract |
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Keywords: | plastic pollution, marine debris, governance |
Research Division: | Human Society |
Research Group: | Policy and administration |
Research Field: | Public policy |
Objective Division: | Environmental Management |
Objective Group: | Coastal and estuarine systems and management |
Objective Field: | Assessment and management of coastal and estuarine ecosystems |
UTAS Author: | Vince, JZ (Associate Professor Joanna Vince) |
ID Code: | 137741 |
Year Published: | 2019 |
Deposited By: | Office of the School of Social Sciences |
Deposited On: | 2020-03-02 |
Last Modified: | 2020-03-13 |
Downloads: | 8 View Download Statistics |
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