A matter of human-sea relations: Insights from leisure boating in Bohuslän, Sweden
Abstract
Global environmental governance increasingly seeks to establish sustainable use
of the oceans. This PhD thesis asks what we can learn about this issue by
exploring leisure boating in Bohuslän, Sweden, as both a perceived and as a
practiced human-sea relation. The thesis analyses governance agencies’ perceptions of human-sea
relations based on the texts produced in relation to the implementation in Sweden
of the Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD). Boaters’ perceptions
about their boats and the seas are explored through interviews and a survey that
drew inspiration from theories of consumption. Boating practices are explored
through practice and affordance theories as related to interviews and participant
observations.As regards perceptions, the thesis finds that governance actors mostly
see leisure boating and the seas as economically valuable and thus worth
preserving. Boaters’ perceptions acknowledge that boating causes environmental
impacts on the seas, but their consumer role prevails, whereby they aspire to
obtain progressively larger recreational boats. This tendency emerges from
economic abilities, emotional drives, and social aspirations – all of which are
supported by market forces, such as the production of cheaper boats and the
increase in coastal real estate prices.Exploring practices of home-making demonstrates that the materials
today included in boating afford comfortable housing at sea. Analyses of touring
and painting practices demonstrate how boating performances emerge through a
process of negotiation, so that different affordances that exist in relation to the
Swedish archipelago are tapped into or avoided. The study makes several contributions. First, it offers valuable new
evidence for the empirically under-researched field of leisure boating in Sweden.
Second, it contributes to tourism research by showing how practices change over
time and how, through the equipment that tourists use, affordances of the
environment can be negotiated. Third, the thesis finds that what boaters do in
nature does not necessarily reflect their more general perceptions about nature.
Instead of focusing merely on how people perceive or value nature, this study
suggests that it might be effective also to highlight socio-material practices.
Materials can importantly shape practices at sea that are environmentally
problematic; and yet, at the same time, material-based solutions can also promote
sustainable use of the seas.
Parts of work
Paper I: Lepoša N. and Knutsson P. (n.d.). The MSFD framing of human-sea relations: a
case of marine tourism in Sweden (under review for Journal of Environmental
Policy & Planning) Paper II: Lepoša N. (2017). The emergence of ambivalent leisure consumer — The case
of boating along the Swedish West Coast. Journal of Cleaner Production, 145:
35–44.
::doi::10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.01.002 Paper III: Lepoša N. (2018). When sea becomes home. Annals of Tourism Research, 72:
11–21.
::doi::10.1016/j.annals.2018.06.001 Paper IV: Lepoša N. (n.d.). Affordances of a seascape negotiated through boating
practices (under review for Scandinavian Journal of Hospitality and Tourism)
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
School of Global Studies, Human Ecology Section ; Institutionen för globala studier, avdelningen för humanekologi
Disputation
Friday 7 September 2018, 13.15, sal 326, Annedalseminariet, Campus Linné Seminariegatan 1A, Göteborg
Date of defence
2018-09-07
View/ Open
Date
2018-08-16Author
Lepoša, Neva
Keywords
Sustainable use of the seas
leisure boating
Sweden
perceptions
practices
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7833-115-4
978-91-7833-116-1
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/57278
Language
eng