From productivism to multi-functionality in the Gascoyne-Murchison Rangelands of Western Australia

A sustainability assessment of the Western Australian (WA) rangelands identified a range of issues associated with regional economic decline typical of many marginal rangeland regions in Australia. As part of a regional rejuvenation strategy, the WA state government purchased selected pastoral lease...

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Main Authors: Hughes, Michael, Jones, Roy
Format: Journal Article
Published: CSIRO Publishing 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41887
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author Hughes, Michael
Jones, Roy
author_facet Hughes, Michael
Jones, Roy
author_sort Hughes, Michael
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description A sustainability assessment of the Western Australian (WA) rangelands identified a range of issues associated with regional economic decline typical of many marginal rangeland regions in Australia. As part of a regional rejuvenation strategy, the WA state government purchased selected pastoral lease properties for incorporation into the conservation estate. It was intended as a means of land-use transition from mono-functional productivism to multi-functionality incorporating protection of significant rangeland bioregions and development of tourism. A 1-year project was conducted to assess the issues relating to this transition. Archived information was obtained from government relating to the characteristics of the lease properties at the time they were purchased. Site visits were undertaken to purchased leases acquired by the government as well as neighbouring leases. During site visits, interviews with pastoralists and purchased lease managers were conducted. A series of facilitated community discussion groups in the region was held to ascertain the views of landholders and managers, government representatives, indigenous interests and commercial operators in the region.This paper describes how the transition to a combination of protection and consumption exchanged one set of problems for another. This was due partly to the intrinsic character of the land, in terms of previous overgrazing, isolation, large distances, and limited infrastructure and services. More importantly, the top-down approach to land transition failed to allocate adequate management resources to replace those lost when the former pastoral leaseholders left. The consequences of inadequate management included theft and rapid degradation of assets, inadequate control of pests and weeds; inadequate fire prevention management and poor communication between the government and other stakeholders over management decisions. This paper discusses the dynamics of this WA rangeland transition with reference to the multi-functional rural transition concept.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-418872017-09-13T16:01:01Z From productivism to multi-functionality in the Gascoyne-Murchison Rangelands of Western Australia Hughes, Michael Jones, Roy protection rural transition tourism rangelands management land use A sustainability assessment of the Western Australian (WA) rangelands identified a range of issues associated with regional economic decline typical of many marginal rangeland regions in Australia. As part of a regional rejuvenation strategy, the WA state government purchased selected pastoral lease properties for incorporation into the conservation estate. It was intended as a means of land-use transition from mono-functional productivism to multi-functionality incorporating protection of significant rangeland bioregions and development of tourism. A 1-year project was conducted to assess the issues relating to this transition. Archived information was obtained from government relating to the characteristics of the lease properties at the time they were purchased. Site visits were undertaken to purchased leases acquired by the government as well as neighbouring leases. During site visits, interviews with pastoralists and purchased lease managers were conducted. A series of facilitated community discussion groups in the region was held to ascertain the views of landholders and managers, government representatives, indigenous interests and commercial operators in the region.This paper describes how the transition to a combination of protection and consumption exchanged one set of problems for another. This was due partly to the intrinsic character of the land, in terms of previous overgrazing, isolation, large distances, and limited infrastructure and services. More importantly, the top-down approach to land transition failed to allocate adequate management resources to replace those lost when the former pastoral leaseholders left. The consequences of inadequate management included theft and rapid degradation of assets, inadequate control of pests and weeds; inadequate fire prevention management and poor communication between the government and other stakeholders over management decisions. This paper discusses the dynamics of this WA rangeland transition with reference to the multi-functional rural transition concept. 2010 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41887 10.1071/RJ09079 CSIRO Publishing fulltext
spellingShingle protection
rural transition
tourism
rangelands
management
land use
Hughes, Michael
Jones, Roy
From productivism to multi-functionality in the Gascoyne-Murchison Rangelands of Western Australia
title From productivism to multi-functionality in the Gascoyne-Murchison Rangelands of Western Australia
title_full From productivism to multi-functionality in the Gascoyne-Murchison Rangelands of Western Australia
title_fullStr From productivism to multi-functionality in the Gascoyne-Murchison Rangelands of Western Australia
title_full_unstemmed From productivism to multi-functionality in the Gascoyne-Murchison Rangelands of Western Australia
title_short From productivism to multi-functionality in the Gascoyne-Murchison Rangelands of Western Australia
title_sort from productivism to multi-functionality in the gascoyne-murchison rangelands of western australia
topic protection
rural transition
tourism
rangelands
management
land use
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41887