Publication | Closed Access
Coastal Management for Sustainable Development: Analysing Environmental and Socio-Economic Changes on the UK Coast
160
Citations
11
References
1998
Year
Littoral areas of the British Isles have long been exploited for their resources, contributing to national wealth and quality of life, yet differing uses have generated conflicts between ecosystem damage and human benefits. This paper seeks to identify the main forces shaping coastal development and to evaluate current use and future management options using the P‑S‑I‑R framework and ecosystem‑function valuation. The study analyzes climate change, demographic and tourism shifts, port expansion, resource extraction, and pollution as pressures, applying an interdisciplinary ecological‑economic approach to assess sustainable coastal resource use.
Littoral areas of the British Isles present an array of properties and features which have long been exploited by human populations and have contributed to the wealth and the quality of life of the nation. Past and ongoing differentiation in uses of coastal zones has led to conflicts ranging from deleterious effects on supporting ecosystems to symbiosis with human activities. This paper aims to elicit the main forces influencing the development of coastal areas and the means available to assess the present use and manage future exploitation of the coastal zone, following the P-S-I-R Framework and an ecosystem function-based valuation methodology. A variety of pressures and their trends is analysed (climate change, population and tourism changes, port development, hydrocarbon and marine aggregate extraction and pollution). All these factors are examined in the context of the sustainable use of coastal resources and on the basis of an interdisciplinary ecological economics approach.
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