Roles for advisory science in the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES)
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/29872Date
2023-01-12Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
What role should science take when providing advice in support of policy and politics? Should a provider of
science-based advice have its own position on the issues it provides advise on? Or should it be as impartial as
possible from the value and policy context of the advice? This theme, long debated, gained new attention in
fisheries and marine governance. Starting from theoretical concepts and stylised models, this study attends to a
theory-practice gap by investigating concrete advisory practices. We analyse roles that the International Council
for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) takes when producing and delivering science-based advice. ICES is an
interesting case because its long history as advice provider offered it unique opportunities to consolidate and
refine its advisory role. Published by the Advisory Committee in ICES, the 2021 “Guide to ICES advisory
framework and principles” describes the overarching framework to ICES advice and the principles it builds on.
Based on this guide, we analyse the forms of science-policy interactions and roles that ICES takes as advisor, how
these roles are enabled, and the challenges they involve. We find that ICES takes different roles vis-`
a-vis policy
and society for different contexts in which it provides advice. Our analysis of ICES’ advice portfolio provides
lessons on how different advice products can be developed through structured processes in a way that helps to
bridge the boundary between science and policy and support the enactment of what ICES sees as appropriate
advisory roles.
Publisher
ElsevierCitation
Linke S, Nielsen kn, Ramirez-Monsalve P. Roles for advisory science in the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES). Marine Policy. 2023;148Metadata
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