dc.description.abstract | Developments in national fisheries and marine environmental policies during the last 30 years have changed the
relationship between coastal communities and the marine resources that people in these communities traditionally harvested. In Norway,
for example, when the state authorities have made decisions to defend what they regard as national interests, the local level has been
left with authority over minor issues related to area planning in the coastal zone. Although coastal planning until recently was about
sharing fishing areas between different users, we now see a spatial dimension emerging in planning, giving it a much broader scope.
The processes of defining spatial properties and creating coastal space as a governable object have the potential to empower local
communities. These processes contribute to enhanced local control and improved local participation in the governance of natural
resources. In Norway, the 2008 Planning and Building Act strengthened the role of municipalities in local planning. In addition, the
application of a new three-dimensional, spatial approach to coastal planning may create opportunities for new control over local
resources. In marine spatial planning (MSP) the natural resources are seen as part of coastal spatial properties; thus, governing of sea
space implies resource governance. As our examples illustrate, considerable power is associated with the ability to identify and define
the properties of coastal space. MSP could become an important tool for controlling local resources, rebuilding collapsed fisheries,
and managing them sustainably at the level of municipalities. | en |