Ocean and Society: Organizational and Technological Developments (Part II)

Wednesday, 9 July 2025: 13:00-14:45
Location: SJES005 (Faculty of Legal, Economic, and Social Sciences (JES))
RC17 Sociology of Organization (host committee)
RC02 Economy and Society
RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology
RC24 Environment and Society

Language: English

In this panel, we want to look at the relationship between organization, technology and society as it unfolds when it comes to the ocean. The ocean is not only the subject of organizational and technological developments, but is also increasingly the subject of scientific research, political and legal regulation, economic exploitation, and ecological concerns.

We ask questions like these:

How is the ocean organized? What kind of organizations play a role? How have these organizations developed historically? What logics do these organizations follow?

How is the ocean being technologized? What technological developments in recent decades have contributed to new possibilities of access and how are these developments linked to scientific findings, but also to economic interests and political calculations?

How has scientific development in particular affected society's approach to the ocean? To what extent is "our" access to the ocean not only technologically but also scientifically mediated in a very specific way?

To what extent is the ocean subject to a specific type of regulation and how has this developed in recent decades?

Which economic sectors are becoming increasingly important today regarding the ocean and which others may be displaced or must adapt? What is the significance of narratives such as the blue economy?

To what extent do these developments go hand in hand with ecological concerns?

The panel is open to a very broad spectrum of works. The only condition is that they have something to do with the ocean – this mostly forgotten phenomenon in sociology.

Session Organizers:
Kurt RACHLITZ, NTNU, Norway, Michael GROTHE-HAMMER, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway and Jennifer Leigh BAILEY, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
Oral Presentations
Exploring the Implications of Different Institutional Logics on Marine Biodiversity Enhancement
Samantha KRISTENSEN, Netherlands; Annet PAUWELUSSEN, Wageningen University and Research, Netherlands; Simon BUSH, Wageningen University, Netherlands
Navigating the Trilemma. Fishery Policy between Economic, Societal and Environmental Sustainability.
Jostein VIK, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway; Jahn Petter JOHNSEN, UiT The Arctic University of Noorway. The Norwegian College of Fishery Science, Norway; Signe Annie SØNVISEN, UiT The Arctic University of Noorway. The Norwegian College of Fishery Science, Norway
What Constitutes the Blue Economy? Antagonism and Clumsy Solutions
Knut LANGE, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom; Carolin DECKER-LANGE, Brunel Business School, Brunel University London, United Kingdom; Katharina BOTHE, German Maritime Museum / Leibniz Institute for Maritime History, Germany; Paul CAUSSAT, Royal Holloway, University of London, United Kingdom
Sustainable Entrepreneurship and Sustainability Transitions: Ocean-Based Bioeconomy in the Seaweed Sector
Padmaja ARGADE, France; Phil KLAUS, International University of Monaco, Monaco
How Do Meta-Organizations Make Grand Challenges Actionable? the Case of the Scientific Organization for the Prevention of Adverse Impacts on Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems
Kurt RACHLITZ, NTNU, Norway; Michael GROTHE-HAMMER, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway; Jennifer Leigh BAILEY, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
The Blue Economy and Its Discontents
Furqan ASIF, Centre for Blue Governance, Aalborg University, Denmark