505
Views
6
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Investor aspirations for Indigenous land and sea management in Australia

, , &

References

  • Amberson, S., K. Biedenweg, J. James, and P. Christie. 2016. “‘The Heartbeat of Our People’: Identifying and Measuring How Salmon Influences Quinault Tribal Well-Being.” Society & Natural Resources 29 (12): 1389–1404.
  • Andrade, G. S., and J. R. Rhodes. 2012. “Protected Areas and Local Communities: An Inevitable Partnership Toward Successful Conservation Strategies?” Ecology and Society 17 (4): 14.
  • Altman, J. 2016. “Imagining Mumeka: Bureaucratic and Kuninjku Perspectives.” In Experiments in Self-determination: Histories of the Outstation Movement in Australia, edited by N. Peterson and F. Myers. Canberra: ANU Press.
  • Austin, B. J., and S. T. Garnett. 2018. “Perspectives on Success from Indigenous Entrepreneurs in Northern Australia.” International Journal for Entrepreneurship and Small Business 33 (2): 176–201.
  • Austin, B. J., C. J. Robinson, J. A. Fitzsimons, M. Sandford, F. McDonald, D. Hinchley, E. Ens, et al. 2018, ‘Integrated Measures of Indigenous Land and Sea Management Effectiveness: Challenge and Opportunity for Improved Conservation Partnerships in Australia’, Conservation and Society. In press.
  • Austin, B. J., T. Vigilante, S. Cowell, I. M. Dutton, D. Djanghara, S. Mangolomara, B. Puermora, A. Bundamurra, and Z. Clement. 2017. “The Uunguu Monitoring and Evaluation Committee: Intercultural Governance of a Land and Sea Management Programme in the Kimberley, Australia.” Ecological Management & Restoration 18 (2): 124–133.
  • Ballet, J., D. Bazin, K. J. M. Koffi, and K. B. Koména. 2015. “Cultural Heterogeneity, Inequalities, Power, and the Management of Natural Resources: How the Capability Approach Contributes to the Debate.” Society & Natural Resources 28 (4): 377–387.
  • Berkes, F. 2007. “Community-based Conservation in a Globalized World.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104 (39): 15188–15193.
  • Borrini-Feyeraband, G., M. Pimbert, M. Taghi Farvar, A. Kothari, and Y. Renard. 2007. Sharing Power: A Global Guide to Collaborative Management of Natural Resources. London: Earthscan.
  • Brown, A. M., L. Bejder, K. H. Pollock, and S. J. Allen. 2014. Abundance of Coastal Dolphins in Roebuck Bay, Western Australia: Updated Results From 2013 and 2014 Sampling Periods, Report to WWF-Australia. Perth: Murdoch University Cetacean Research Unit, Murdoch University.
  • Bryant, R. L. 2002. “Non-governmental Organizations and Governmentality: ‘Consuming’ Biodiversity and Indigenous People in the Philippines.” Political Studies 50 (2): 268–292.
  • Buck, M., and C. Hamilton. 2011. “The Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising From Their Utilization to the Convention on Biological Diversity.” Review of European Community & International Environmental Law 20 (1): 47–61.
  • Carter, J. 2010. “Protocols, Particularities, and Problematising Indigenous ‘Engagement’ in Community-Based Environmental Management in Settled Australia.” The Geographical Journal 176: 199–213.
  • Convention on Biological Diversity. 2011. Aichi Biodiversity Targets, viewed 17 December 2015, <https://www.cbd.int/sp/targets/>.
  • Davies, T. E., I. R. A. Fazey, W. Cresswell, and N. Pettorelli. 2014. “Missing the Trees for the Wood: Why we are Failing to see Success in pro-Poor Conservation.” Animal Conservation 17 (4): 303–312.
  • Ens, E. J., P. Pert, P. A. Clarke, M. Budden, L. Clubb, B. Doran, C. Douras, et al. 2015. “Indigenous Biocultural Knowledge in Ecosystem Science and Management: Review and Insight from Australia.” Biological Conservation 181: 133–149.
  • Fache, E. 2014. “Caring for Country, a Form of Bureaucratic Participation. Conservation, Development, and Neoliberalism in Indigenous Australia.” Anthropological Forum 24 (3): 1–20.
  • Farhan Ferrari, M., C. de Jong, and V. S. Belohrad. 2015. “Community-based Monitoring and Information Systems (CBMIS) in the Context of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).” Biodiversity 16: 57–67.
  • Fletcher, R., and B. Buscher. 2017. “The PES Conceit: Revisiting the Relationship between Payments for Environmental Services and Neoliberal Conservation.” Ecological Economics 132: 224–231.
  • Garnett, S. T., K. K. Zander, and C. J. Robinson. 2018. “Social License as an Emergent Property of Political Interactions: Response to Kendal and Ford 2017.” Conservation Biology. In press.
  • Gibson, G., D. Hoogeveen, A. Macdonald, and The Firelight Group. 2018. “Impact Assessment in the Arctic: Emerging Practices of Indigenous-led Review.” Report to the Gwich’in Council International (GCI), April 2018, Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada.
  • Gorenflo, L. J., S. Romaine, R. A. Mittermeier, and K. Walker-Painemilla. 2012. “Co-occurrence of Linguistic and Biological Diversity in Biodiversity Hotspots and High Biodiversity Wilderness Areas.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109 (21): 8032–8037.
  • Greiber, T., S. P. Moreno, M. Åhrén, J. N. Carrasco, E. C. Kamau, J. C. Medaglia, M. J. Oliva, F. Perron-Welch, and C. Williams. 2012. An Explanatory Guide to the Nagoya Protocol on Access and Benefit-Sharing. Gland: IUCN.
  • Gunningham, N., R. A. Kagan, and D. Thornton. 2004. “Social License and Environmental Protection: Why Businesses go Beyond Compliance.” Law & Social Inquiry 29: 307–341.
  • Hajjar, R. F., R. A. Kozak, and J. L. Innes. 2012. “Is Decentralization Leading to “Real” Decision-Making Power for Forest-Dependent Communities? Case Studies from Mexico and Brazil.” Ecology and Society 17 (1): 12.
  • Hill, R., C. Grant, M. George, C. J. Robinson, S. Jackson, and N. Abel. 2012. “A Typology of Indigenous Engagement in Australian Environmental Management: Implications for Knowledge Integration and Social-Ecological System Sustainability.” Ecology and Society 17: 1–17.
  • Hill, R., P. Pert, J. Davies, C. Robinson, F. Walsh, and F. Falco-Mammone. 2013. Indigenous Land Management in Australia: Extent, Scope, Diversity, Barriers and Success Factors. Cairns: CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences.
  • Howitt, R., K. Doohan, S. Suchet-Pearson, S. Cross, R. Lawrence, G. J. Lunkapis, S. Muller, S. Prout, and S. Veland. 2013. “Intercultural Capacity Deficits: Contested Geographies of Coexistence in Natural Resource Management.” Asia Pacific Viewpoint 54 (2): 126–140.
  • Kurucz, E. C., B. A. Colbert, and D. Wheeler. 2008. “‘The Business Case for Corporate Social Responsibility’.” In The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Social Responsibility, edited by A. Crane, D. Matten, A. McWilliams, J. Moon, and D. S. Siegel, 83–112. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Larson, E. R., S. Howell, P. Kareiva, and P. R. Armsworth. 2016. “Constraints of Philanthropy on Determining the Distribution of Biodiversity Conservation Funding.” Conservation Biology 30 (1): 206–215.
  • Leverington, F., K. L. Costa, H. Pavese, A. Lisle, and M. Hockings. 2010. “A Global Analysis of Protected Area Management Effectiveness.” Environmental Management 46 (5): 685–698.
  • Liamputtong, P. 2009. Qualitative Research Methods. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
  • Mackie, K., and D. Meacheam. 2016. “Working on Country: a Case Study of Unusual Environmental Program Success.” Australasian Journal of Environmental Management 23 (2): 157–174.
  • Maclean, K., C. J. Robinson, and D. C. Natcher. 2015. “Consensus Building or Constructive Conflict? Aboriginal Discursive Strategies to Enhance Participation in Natural Resource Management in Australia and Canada.” Society & Natural Resources 28 (2): 197–211.
  • Maffi, L., and E. Woodley. 2012. Biocultural Diversity Conservation: a Global Sourcebook. London: Earthscan.
  • McCarthy, D. P., P. F. Donald, J. P. Scharlemann, G. M. Buchanan, A. Balmford, J. M. Green, L. A. Bennun, et al. 2012. “Financial Costs of Meeting Global Biodiversity Conservation Targets: Current Spending and Unmet Needs.” Science 338 (6109): 946–949.
  • Michell, G., and P. McManus. 2013. “Engaging Communities for Success: Social Impact Assessment and Social Licence to Operate at Northparkes Mines, NSW.” Australian Geographer 44 (4): 435–459.
  • Moffat, K., J. Lacey, A. Zhang, and S. Leipold. 2015. “The Social Licence to Operate: a Critical Review.” Forestry 0: 1–12.
  • Moorcroft, H., and M. Adams. 2014. “Emerging Geographies of Conservation and Indigenous Land in Australia.” Australian Geographer 45 (4): 485–504.
  • Mueller-Hirth, N. 2012. “‘If You Don’t Count, You Don’t Count: Monitoring and Evaluation in South African NGOs’.” Development and Change 43 (3): 649–670.
  • Muhic, J., E. Abbott, and M. J. Ward. 2012. “The Warru (Petrogale Lateralis MacDonnell Ranges Race) Reintroduction Project on the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands, South Australia.” Ecological Management & Restoration 13 (1): 89–92.
  • Muller, S. 2012. “‘‘Two-Ways’: Bringing Indigenous and non-Indigenous Knowledges Together’.” In Country, Native Title and Ecology, edited by J. K. Weir, 59–79. Canberra: ANU Press.
  • Muller, S. 2014. “Co-motion: Making Space to Care for Country.” Geoforum; Journal of Physical, Human, and Regional Geosciences 54: 132–141.
  • Noble, K., and I. Ward. 2005. “Ngaanyatjarra Collaborative Management of Threatened Desert Fauna: Traditional People, Contemporary Conservation.” In Old Ways, new Ways: Wildlife Management in Northern Australia, edited by J. Gorman, L. Petheram and T. Vigilante, 47–56, proceedings of the 12th Annual Conference of the Australasian Wildlife Management Society. Darwin: Charles Darwin University.
  • Ocampo-Melgar, A., and B. J. Orr. 2016. “Participatory Criteria Selection: Finding Conflictive Positions in Environmental Postassessment of Land Management and Restoration Actions.” Society & Natural Resources 29 (1): 119–130.
  • Osborne, S., and J. Guenther. 2013. “Red Dirt Thinking on Aspiration and Success.” The Australian Journal of Indigenous Education 42 (2): 88–99.
  • Patterson, J. J. 2016. “Exploring Local Responses to a Wicked Problem: Context, Collective Action, and Outcomes in Catchments in Subtropical Australia.” Society & Natural Resources 29 (10): 1198–1213.
  • Poe, M. R., K. C. Norman, and P. S. Levin. 2014. “Cultural Dimensions of Socioecological Systems: Key Connections and Guiding Principles for Conservation in Coastal Environments.” Conservation Letters 7 (3): 166–175.
  • Porter-Bolland, L., E. A. Ellis, M. R. Guariguata, J. Ruiz-Mallén, S. Negrete-Yankelevich, and V. Reyes-García. 2012. “Community Managed Forests and Forest Protected Areas: An Assessment of Their Conservation Effectiveness Across the Tropics.” Forest Ecology and Management 268: 6–17.
  • Prno, J., and D. S. Slocombe. 2012. “Exploring the Origins of ‘Social License to Operate’ in the Mining Sector: Perspectives From Governance and Sustainability Theories.” Resources Policy 37 (3): 346–357.
  • Read, J. L., and M. J. Ward. 2011. “Bringing Back Warru: Initiation and Implementation of the South Australian Warru Recovery Plan.” Australian Mammalogy 33 (2): 214–220.
  • Robinson, C., and T. Wallington. 2012. “Boundary Work: Engaging Knowledge Systems in Co-Management of Feral Animals on Indigenous Lands.” Ecology and Society 17 (2): 16.
  • Robinson, D. F., and M. Forsyth. 2016. “People, Plants, Place, and Rules: the Nagoya Protocol in Pacific Island Countries.” Geographical Research 54 (3): 324–335.
  • Robinson, C. J., G. James, and P. J. Whitehead. 2016. “Negotiating Indigenous Benefits From Payment From Ecosystem Services (PES) Schemes.” Global Environmental Change 38: 21–29.
  • Robinson, C. J., A. R. Renwick, T. May, E. Gerrard, R. Foley, M. Battaglia, H. Possingham, D. Griggs, and D. Walker. 2016. “Indigenous Benefits and Carbon Offset Schemes: An Australian Case Study.” Environmental Science and Policy 56: 129–134.
  • Smyth, D. 1994. Understanding Country: The Importance of Land and sea in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Societies (No. 1). Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service.
  • Smyth, D. 2011. Guidelines for Country Based Planning, Queensland Department of Environment and Resource Management, Cairns.
  • Smyth, D. 2015. “Indigenous Protected Areas and ICCAs: Commonalities, Contrasts and Confusions.” Parks 21 (2): 73–84.
  • Stetson, G., and S. Mumme. 2016. “Sustainable Development in the Bering Strait: Indigenous Values and the Challenge of Collaborative Governance.” Society & Natural Resources 29 (7): 791–806.
  • Swemmer, L., R. Grant, W. Annecke, and S. Freitag-Ronaldson. 2015. “Toward More Effective Benefit Sharing in South African National Parks.” Society & Natural Resources 28 (1): 4–20.
  • Tengö, M., E. S. Brondizio, T. Elmqvist, P. Malmer, and M. Spierenburg. 2014. “Connecting Diverse Knowledge Systems for Enhanced Ecosystem Governance: the Multiple Evidence Base Approach.” Ambio 43: 579–591.
  • Tengö, M., R. Hill, P. Malmer, C. M. Raymond, M. Spierenburg, F. Danielsen, T. Elmqvist, and C. Folke. 2017. “Weaving Knowledge Systems in IPBES, CBD and Beyond—Lessons Learned for Sustainability.” Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 26: 17–25.
  • Turnhout, E., K. Neves, and E. de Lijster. 2014. “‘Measurementality’ in Biodiversity Governance: Knowledge, Transparency, and the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES).” Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 46: 581–597.
  • United Nations Development Program. 2006. “Community Action to Conserve Biodiversity: Linking Biodiversity Conservation with Poverty Reduction.” GEF Small Grants Program, Equator Initiative, UNDP, New York, USA.
  • Verran, H. 2013. “Engagements Between Disparate Knowledge Traditions: Toward Doing Difference Generatively and in Good Faith.” In Contested Ecologies: Dialogues in the South on Nature and Knowledge, edited by L. Green, 141–161. Cape Town: HSRC Press.
  • Verran, H. 2014. “Working with Those Who Think Otherwise.” Common Knowledge 20 (3): 527–539.
  • Vincent, E. and Neale, T. eds. 2016. Unstable Relations: Indigenous People and Environmentalism in Contemporary Australia. Perth: Apollo Books.
  • Walsh, F. J., P. V. Dobson, and J. C. Douglas. 2013. “Anpernirrentye: a Framework for Enhanced Application of Indigenous Ecological Knowledge in Natural Resource Management.” Ecology and Society 18 (3): 18.
  • Williams, T., and P. Hardison. 2013. “Culture, law, Risk and Governance: Contexts of Traditional Knowledge in Climate Change Adaptation.” Climatic Change 120: 531–544.
  • Woodward, E. 2008. “Social Networking for Aboriginal Land Management in Remote Northern Australia.” Australasian Journal of Environmental Management 15 (4): 241–252.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.