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Science and Social License: Defining Environmental Sustainability of Atlantic Salmon Aquaculture in South-Eastern Tasmania, Australia

Authors :
Peat Leith
Marcus Haward
Emily Ogier
Source :
Social Epistemology. 28:277-296
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2014.

Abstract

Social license reflects environmental and social change, and sees community as an important stakeholder and partner. Science, scientists, and science policy have a key role in the processes that generate social license. In this paper, we focus on the interaction between science and social license in salmon aquaculture in south-eastern Tasmania. This research suggests that social license will be supported by distributed and credible knowledge co-production. Drawing on qualitative, interpretive social research we argue that targeted science, instilled by appropriate science policy, can underpin social license by supporting emerging, distributed, and pluralistic knowledge production. Where social license is important and environmental contexts are complex, such knowledge production might support environmental governance, and so improve outcomes in coastal zone management and beyond.

Details

ISSN :
14645297 and 02691728
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Social Epistemology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b8891c9a963370e227d023991162f6db