This chapter describes the community reactions and divisions occasioned by the World Heritage designations of Shark Bay (1991) and the Ningaloo Coast (2011) in the remote Gascoyne region of Australia. It considers how the reduction of the region’s isolation over the twentieth century, together with the growth of tourism and significant increases in conservation measures and environmental regulation, disrupted the lifestyles of communities which were formerly based around pastoral and fishing activities. The World Heritage designation processes generated considerable local resentment of and resistance to “outside interference”. The chapter uses Jacoby’s concept of moral ecology to interrogate the differing views of and aspirations for the Ga...
The existence of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area (WHA) is not only a testimony to its u...
Spanning two major ecosystems, the GBR and its catchments, this paper explores fragments of culture-...
This paper reports on resident and tourist opinions of the interrelationship between the environment...
World Heritage status can both confer prestige on and potentially attract tourists to the areas so d...
The remote Ningaloo Coast region, the location of Australia’s largest fringing coral reef, was desig...
The remote Ningaloo Coast region, the location of Australia's largest fringing coral reef, was desig...
This study will evaluate three World Heritage initiatives in Western Australia; Shark Bay and Ningal...
This study will evaluate three World Heritage initiatives in Western Australia; Shark Bay and Ningal...
Cultural models of the coast affect—and are affected by—our marine ethics, frameworks for coastal ow...
On an island continent, Australians proclaim themselves to be “girt by sea” in their national anthem...
Conflicts between industrial development and environmental conservation can be particularly acute wh...
The historical marine ecology of a place and the reconstruction of baseline populations for its mari...
The Great Barrier Reef is located along the coast of Queensland in north-east Australia and is the w...
Understanding how people are dependent on Large Scale Marine Protected Areas (LSMPAs) is important f...
A key component of successful coastal management efforts is an effective communication and engagemen...
The existence of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area (WHA) is not only a testimony to its u...
Spanning two major ecosystems, the GBR and its catchments, this paper explores fragments of culture-...
This paper reports on resident and tourist opinions of the interrelationship between the environment...
World Heritage status can both confer prestige on and potentially attract tourists to the areas so d...
The remote Ningaloo Coast region, the location of Australia’s largest fringing coral reef, was desig...
The remote Ningaloo Coast region, the location of Australia's largest fringing coral reef, was desig...
This study will evaluate three World Heritage initiatives in Western Australia; Shark Bay and Ningal...
This study will evaluate three World Heritage initiatives in Western Australia; Shark Bay and Ningal...
Cultural models of the coast affect—and are affected by—our marine ethics, frameworks for coastal ow...
On an island continent, Australians proclaim themselves to be “girt by sea” in their national anthem...
Conflicts between industrial development and environmental conservation can be particularly acute wh...
The historical marine ecology of a place and the reconstruction of baseline populations for its mari...
The Great Barrier Reef is located along the coast of Queensland in north-east Australia and is the w...
Understanding how people are dependent on Large Scale Marine Protected Areas (LSMPAs) is important f...
A key component of successful coastal management efforts is an effective communication and engagemen...
The existence of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area (WHA) is not only a testimony to its u...
Spanning two major ecosystems, the GBR and its catchments, this paper explores fragments of culture-...
This paper reports on resident and tourist opinions of the interrelationship between the environment...