Community-based natural resource management (NRM) has seen a shift in the discourse from participation to engagement, reflecting a focus on increasingly active citizen involvement in management and action. This paper considers this shift in relation to two contrasting theoretical perspectives. The first is deliberative democracy, drawing on Habermas, which emphasises the importance of discussing and rationalising values and actions. The second is governmentality, or ‘governing through community’ which draws on Foucault, emphasising neo-liberal management styles and ‘self-help’. In considering the empirical relevance of these theoretical perspectives, this paper draws on a case study of public engagement in NRM in the Lake Eyre Basin, a remo...
Much of the eastern seaboard of Australia is in a state of transition. This transition represents a ...
This paper examines the influence of global discourses on policies and programmes for Natural Resour...
Remote dryland regions are characterised by sparse populations and socially marginalised voices whic...
[Extract] Public engagement is a defining feature of collaborative approaches to environmental manag...
Since the 1980s, natural resource management (NRM) in Australia and New Zealand has been an ambitiou...
An overview of the formal institutional arrangements for natural resource management (NRM) in the La...
Community engagement has been cited as a critical component for the effective functioning of NRM to ...
Natural resource governance in Australia has been increasingly focused on the effective engagement o...
This study illustrates the need for purposeful community engagement, the significance of social capi...
The management of dryland environments involves the interaction of multiple government agencies and ...
The management of dryland environments involves the interaction of multiple government agencies and ...
This chapter was developed as part of the ‘People, communities and economies of the Lake Eyre Basin’...
Economic and social considerations in natural resource management include the need for community par...
The most influential attempts to classify forms of public participation are based on the ‘ladder’ of...
Aspects of Australian natural resource management, particularly forestry, such as harvesting from pu...
Much of the eastern seaboard of Australia is in a state of transition. This transition represents a ...
This paper examines the influence of global discourses on policies and programmes for Natural Resour...
Remote dryland regions are characterised by sparse populations and socially marginalised voices whic...
[Extract] Public engagement is a defining feature of collaborative approaches to environmental manag...
Since the 1980s, natural resource management (NRM) in Australia and New Zealand has been an ambitiou...
An overview of the formal institutional arrangements for natural resource management (NRM) in the La...
Community engagement has been cited as a critical component for the effective functioning of NRM to ...
Natural resource governance in Australia has been increasingly focused on the effective engagement o...
This study illustrates the need for purposeful community engagement, the significance of social capi...
The management of dryland environments involves the interaction of multiple government agencies and ...
The management of dryland environments involves the interaction of multiple government agencies and ...
This chapter was developed as part of the ‘People, communities and economies of the Lake Eyre Basin’...
Economic and social considerations in natural resource management include the need for community par...
The most influential attempts to classify forms of public participation are based on the ‘ladder’ of...
Aspects of Australian natural resource management, particularly forestry, such as harvesting from pu...
Much of the eastern seaboard of Australia is in a state of transition. This transition represents a ...
This paper examines the influence of global discourses on policies and programmes for Natural Resour...
Remote dryland regions are characterised by sparse populations and socially marginalised voices whic...