Who cares about ocean acidification in the Plasticene?

Plastics is all the rage, and mitigating marine litter is topping the agenda for nations pushing issues such as ocean acidification, or even climate change, away from the public consciousness. We are personally directly affected by plastics and charismatic megafauna is dying from it, and it is somet...

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Main Authors: Tiller, Rachel, Arenas, Francisco, Galdies, Charles, Leitao, Francisco, Malej, Alenka, Romera Martinez, Beatriz, Solidoro, Cosimo, Stojanov, Robert, Turk, Valentino, Guerra, Roberta
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/44924
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spelling ftunivmalta:oai:www.um.edu.mt:123456789/44924 2023-07-23T04:21:05+02:00 Who cares about ocean acidification in the Plasticene? Tiller, Rachel Arenas, Francisco Galdies, Charles Leitao, Francisco Malej, Alenka Romera Martinez, Beatriz Solidoro, Cosimo Stojanov, Robert Turk, Valentino Guerra, Roberta 2019 https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/44924 en eng Elsevier Tiller, R., Arenas, F., Galdies, C., Leitão, F., Malej, A., Romera, B. M., . & Guerra, R. (2019). Who cares about ocean acidification in the Plasticene?. Ocean & Coastal Management, 174, 170-180. 09645691 https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/44924 info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess The copyright of this work belongs to the author(s)/publisher. The rights of this work are as defined by the appropriate Copyright Legislation or as modified by any successive legislation. Users may access this work and can make use of the information contained in accordance with the Copyright Legislation provided that the author must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the prior permission of the copyright holder. Ocean acidification Climatic changes Oceanography Global environmental change article 2019 ftunivmalta 2023-07-05T17:28:53Z Plastics is all the rage, and mitigating marine litter is topping the agenda for nations pushing issues such as ocean acidification, or even climate change, away from the public consciousness. We are personally directly affected by plastics and charismatic megafauna is dying from it, and it is something that appears to be doable. So, who cares about the issue of ocean acidification anymore? We all should. The challenge is dual in the fact that is both invisible to the naked eye and therefore not felt like a pressing issue to the public, thereby not reaching the top of the agenda of policy makers; but also that it is framed in the climate change narrative of fear - whereby it instills in a fight-or-flight response in the public, resulting in their avoidance of the issue because they feel they are unable to take action that have results. In this article, we argue that the effective global environmental governance of ocean acidification, though critical to address, mitigate against and adapt to, is hindered by the both this lack of perception of urgency in the general public, fueled by a lack of media coverage, as well as a fight-or-flight response resulting from fear. We compare this to the more media friendly and plastics problem that is tangible and manageable. We report on a media plots of plastics and ocean acidification coverage over time and argue that the issue needs to be detangled from climate change and framed as its own issue to reach the agenda at a global level, making it manageable to assess and even care about for policy makers and the public alike? peer-reviewed Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification University of Malta: OAR@UM
institution Open Polar
collection University of Malta: OAR@UM
op_collection_id ftunivmalta
language English
topic Ocean acidification
Climatic changes
Oceanography
Global environmental change
spellingShingle Ocean acidification
Climatic changes
Oceanography
Global environmental change
Tiller, Rachel
Arenas, Francisco
Galdies, Charles
Leitao, Francisco
Malej, Alenka
Romera Martinez, Beatriz
Solidoro, Cosimo
Stojanov, Robert
Turk, Valentino
Guerra, Roberta
Who cares about ocean acidification in the Plasticene?
topic_facet Ocean acidification
Climatic changes
Oceanography
Global environmental change
description Plastics is all the rage, and mitigating marine litter is topping the agenda for nations pushing issues such as ocean acidification, or even climate change, away from the public consciousness. We are personally directly affected by plastics and charismatic megafauna is dying from it, and it is something that appears to be doable. So, who cares about the issue of ocean acidification anymore? We all should. The challenge is dual in the fact that is both invisible to the naked eye and therefore not felt like a pressing issue to the public, thereby not reaching the top of the agenda of policy makers; but also that it is framed in the climate change narrative of fear - whereby it instills in a fight-or-flight response in the public, resulting in their avoidance of the issue because they feel they are unable to take action that have results. In this article, we argue that the effective global environmental governance of ocean acidification, though critical to address, mitigate against and adapt to, is hindered by the both this lack of perception of urgency in the general public, fueled by a lack of media coverage, as well as a fight-or-flight response resulting from fear. We compare this to the more media friendly and plastics problem that is tangible and manageable. We report on a media plots of plastics and ocean acidification coverage over time and argue that the issue needs to be detangled from climate change and framed as its own issue to reach the agenda at a global level, making it manageable to assess and even care about for policy makers and the public alike? peer-reviewed
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Tiller, Rachel
Arenas, Francisco
Galdies, Charles
Leitao, Francisco
Malej, Alenka
Romera Martinez, Beatriz
Solidoro, Cosimo
Stojanov, Robert
Turk, Valentino
Guerra, Roberta
author_facet Tiller, Rachel
Arenas, Francisco
Galdies, Charles
Leitao, Francisco
Malej, Alenka
Romera Martinez, Beatriz
Solidoro, Cosimo
Stojanov, Robert
Turk, Valentino
Guerra, Roberta
author_sort Tiller, Rachel
title Who cares about ocean acidification in the Plasticene?
title_short Who cares about ocean acidification in the Plasticene?
title_full Who cares about ocean acidification in the Plasticene?
title_fullStr Who cares about ocean acidification in the Plasticene?
title_full_unstemmed Who cares about ocean acidification in the Plasticene?
title_sort who cares about ocean acidification in the plasticene?
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2019
url https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/44924
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation Tiller, R., Arenas, F., Galdies, C., Leitão, F., Malej, A., Romera, B. M., . & Guerra, R. (2019). Who cares about ocean acidification in the Plasticene?. Ocean & Coastal Management, 174, 170-180.
09645691
https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/44924
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
The copyright of this work belongs to the author(s)/publisher. The rights of this work are as defined by the appropriate Copyright Legislation or as modified by any successive legislation. Users may access this work and can make use of the information contained in accordance with the Copyright Legislation provided that the author must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the prior permission of the copyright holder.
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