Conflicts between industrial development and environmental conservation can be particularly acute when such development occurs in the vicinity of World Heritage sites. A key example is the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area (GBRWHA) in northeastern Australia, where a 2012 review by the World Heritage Council found that rapid port development inshore of the coral reef posed significant risks to local marine ecosystems. Such instances pose pressing challenges for decision-makers seeking to manage World Heritage sites for multiple values and needs, including those of key stakeholder groups, such as local communities. There is increasingly a societal expectation that public decision-making takes into account local views and priorities, and ...
Improvements in human wellbeing are dependent on improving ecosystems. Such considerations are parti...
© 2016, Palgrave Macmillan Ltd. All rights reserved. Inspiration, aspirations, attitudes, and percep...
Coastal freshwater and tidal wetland habitats are being transformed as a result of increasing demand...
Conflicts between industrial development and environmental conservation can be particularly acute wh...
The remote Ningaloo Coast region, the location of Australia's largest fringing coral reef, was desig...
The Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area, Australia, covers over 348,000 km² of tropical marine ec...
The Great Barrier Reef (GBR) is a natural asset of global significance, spanning 2600 km’s along the...
World Heritage (WH) Listing brings with it an obligation on the part of the responsible government t...
The remote Ningaloo Coast region, the location of Australia’s largest fringing coral reef, was desig...
The Great Barrier Reef (GBR) is a natural asset of global significance, spanning 2600 km’s along the...
The incorporation of local and traditional knowledges into environmental governance regimes is incre...
Coastal zones are complex and highly productive social-ecological systems (SES), but their resi...
Recent rapid growth in the natural gas industry has led to concerns about the potential impacts of d...
Improvements in human wellbeing are dependent on improving ecosystems. Such considerations are parti...
© 2016, Palgrave Macmillan Ltd. All rights reserved. Inspiration, aspirations, attitudes, and percep...
Coastal freshwater and tidal wetland habitats are being transformed as a result of increasing demand...
Conflicts between industrial development and environmental conservation can be particularly acute wh...
The remote Ningaloo Coast region, the location of Australia's largest fringing coral reef, was desig...
The Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area, Australia, covers over 348,000 km² of tropical marine ec...
The Great Barrier Reef (GBR) is a natural asset of global significance, spanning 2600 km’s along the...
World Heritage (WH) Listing brings with it an obligation on the part of the responsible government t...
The remote Ningaloo Coast region, the location of Australia’s largest fringing coral reef, was desig...
The Great Barrier Reef (GBR) is a natural asset of global significance, spanning 2600 km’s along the...
The incorporation of local and traditional knowledges into environmental governance regimes is incre...
Coastal zones are complex and highly productive social-ecological systems (SES), but their resi...
Recent rapid growth in the natural gas industry has led to concerns about the potential impacts of d...
Improvements in human wellbeing are dependent on improving ecosystems. Such considerations are parti...
© 2016, Palgrave Macmillan Ltd. All rights reserved. Inspiration, aspirations, attitudes, and percep...
Coastal freshwater and tidal wetland habitats are being transformed as a result of increasing demand...