Author(s) |
Gray, Mathew
Wolfenden, John
|
Publication Date |
2003
|
Abstract |
Forest policy and forestry management in Tasmania have undergone a number of changes in the last thirty years, many explicitly aimed at improving industry sustainability, job security, and forest biodiversity conservation. Yet forestry remains a contentious issue in Tasmania, due to a number of interacting factors, most significant of which is the prevalence of a 'command and control' governance approach by policymakers and managers. New approaches such as multiple-stakeholder decision-making, adaptive management, and direct public participation in policymaking are needed. Such an approach has been attempted in Canada in the last decade, through the Canadian Model Forest Program and may be suitable for Tasmania. This article seeks to describe what the Canadian Model Forest approach is, how it may be implemented in Tasmania, and what role it may play in the shift to a new forestry paradigm. Until such a paradigm shift occurs contentions and confrontations are likely to continue.
|
Citation |
Australasian Journal of Environmental Management, 11(1), p. 55-64
|
ISSN |
2159-5356
1448-6563
1322-1698
|
Link | |
Publisher |
Environment Institute of Australia and New Zealand
|
Title |
The Canadian 'Model Forest' approach: A Way Forward for Tasmania
|
Type of document |
Journal Article
|
Entity Type |
Publication
|
Name | Size | format | Description | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|
administrative/PREMIS.xml | 0.735 KB | PREMIS.xml | View document | |
closed/SOURCE01.pdf | 31.758 KB | application/pdf | administrative | View document |
administrative/JHOVE.xml | 61.688 KB | JHOVE.xml | View document | |
administrative/MODS.xml | 4.116 KB | MODS.xml | View document | |
open/SOURCE02.pdf | 600.102 KB | application/pdf | Publisher version (open access) | View document |