Litcius/Paper detail

Five actionable pillars to engage the next generation of leaders in the co-design of transformative ocean solutions

Erin V. Satterthwaite, Valeriya Komyakova, Natalia Erazo, Louise Carin Gammage, Gabriel A. Juma, Rachel Kelly, Daniel Lee Kleinman, Delphine Lobelle, Rachel Sapery James, Norlaila Binti Mohd Zanuri

2022PLoS Biology21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Solutions to complex and unprecedented global challenges are urgently needed. Overcoming these challenges requires input and innovative solutions from all experts, including Early Career Ocean Professionals (ECOPs). To achieve diverse inclusion from ECOPs, fundamental changes must occur at all levels-from individuals to organizations. Drawing on insights from across the globe, we propose 5 actionable pillars that support the engagement of ECOPs in co-design processes that address ocean sustainability: sharing knowledge through networks and mentorship, providing cross-boundary training and opportunities, incentivizing and celebrating knowledge co-design, creating inclusive and participatory governance structures, and catalyzing culture change for inclusivity. Foundational to all actions are the cross-cutting principles of justice, equity, diversity, and inclusivity. In addition, the pillars are cross-boundary in nature, including collaboration and innovation across sectors, disciplines, regions, generations, and backgrounds. Together, these recommendations provide an actionable and iterative path toward inclusive engagement and intergenerational exchange that can develop ocean solutions for a sustainable future.

Topics & Concepts

Transformative learningGlobeSustainabilityEquity (law)MentorshipParticipatory designCorporate governanceEngineering ethicsCitizen journalismDiversity (politics)Public relationsBiologyKnowledge managementSociologyPolitical scienceEngineeringBusinessEcologyComputer scienceMechanical engineeringFinanceNeuroscienceAnthropologyLawPedagogyParallelsCoastal and Marine ManagementCoral and Marine Ecosystems StudiesOcean Acidification Effects and Responses