body bg

Inform-Banner

Exploring Discourses in Environmental Decision Making: An Indigenous Hunting Case Study

  • Year: 2010
  • Author: Nursey-Bray M; Marsh H; Ross, H
  • Journal Name: Society and Natural Resources
  • Journal Number: Vol.23, No.4
  • Country: Australia
  • State/Region: Queensland

The challenge of developing environmental outcomes acceptable to stakeholders with different values is well documented. Discourse analysis provides insights into how the views of different stakeholders affect decision making. We studied the discourses of key actors associated with the implementation of a Turtle and Dugong Hunting Management Plan developed by Hope Vale Aboriginal community in the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area, Australia. The discourses of the environmental managers and community members were very different. Hope Vale people prioritized cultural well-being; the staff of management agencies prioritized biodiversity outcomes. These differences precluded effective outcomes despite considerable investment in hunting management over more than 20 years by both groups. Understanding the discursive terrain within environmental management domains can inform environmental decision making and the implementation of agreed management arrangements, enabling biodiversity objectives and Indigenous cultural aspirations to be met in a socially just, economically viable, and environmentally sustainable way.

Related Items

GASCOYNE REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN: 2010 – 2020

The Gascoyne Regional Development Plan is designed to provide a strategic direction for the...

Australia is continuing to make progress against cancer, but the regional and remote disadvantage remains

Design: Analysis of routinely collected death certificate and corresponding population data from...

Income Growth and Employment in the Pilbara: an evolutionary analysis, 1980–2010

There is a growing interest in the application of evolutionary concepts and methodologies in...

Share this with your friends

Footer Logo

Contact Us

Level 2, 53 Blackall Street
Barton ACT 2600
AUSTRALIA
Telephone: 02 6260 3733
or email us