Title: Major paradigm shifts in NRM in Australia
Authors: Lisa Robins
Addresses: The Fenner School of Environment and Society (Bldg 43), The Australian National University, Acton ACT 0200, Australia
Abstract: This paper examines the influence of global discourses on policies and programmes for Natural Resource Management (NRM) in Australia, and the emergence of 56 formalised regional NRM bodies and their community-based Boards of management with responsibilities for NRM planning and implementation. It traces the emergence of the |landcare movement| and the trend toward |Integrated Catchment Management (ICM)|, including governments around Australia embracing greater community input. It examines |sustainable development| and |neoliberalism|, which have been advocated in concert, but with signs of the latter dominating. The formalisation of |regionalism| for NRM in Australia has marked a shift in power and resources from the state level to both the federal and regional levels. What remains to be seen is whether the responsibilities devolved to regional NRM bodies and their Boards are realistically within their capacities to deliver.
Keywords: Australia; capacity building; integrated catchment management; ICM; neoliberalism; landcare movement; natural resources management; NRM; regionalisation; regionalism; sustainable development; sustainability; environmental management.
DOI: 10.1504/IJGENVI.2007.016110
International Journal of Global Environmental Issues, 2007 Vol.7 No.4, pp.300 - 311
Published online: 05 Dec 2007 *
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