Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-mlc7c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T23:28:40.212Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Role of bioregionalism in Bookmark Biosphere Reserve, Australia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2008

SHARRON L. PFUELLER*
Affiliation:
School of Geography and Environmental Science, Monash University, Victoria 3800, Australia
*
*Correspondence: Dr Sharron Pfueller Tel: +61 3 9905 4619 Fax: +61 3 9905 2948 e-mail: [email protected]

Summary

Bioregionalism claims that interaction between the biophysical and human components of a region generates place-based environmental and social understanding and concern, which lead to locally shared power and responsibility in cooperative land management and governance. The Man and the Biosphere Programme's Seville Strategy calls for local community participation in a multi-stakeholder ecosystem-based approach to conservation, but it is unclear if tenets of bioregionalism play a role in its implementation. Bookmark Biosphere Reserve (BBR) in Australia has substantially succeeded in scientific research and monitoring, conservation, environmental education and sustainable land-use initiatives. Aspects of bioregionalism (for example recognition of the region's unique identity, local community sense of responsibility, integration of local knowledge, presence of motivated local leaders and cooperative community-based management through a network of groups) have contributed to success. Other crucial factors were funding, technical and scientific information and support from government agencies, leadership from members of state and federal government and from private philanthropic foundations, community capacity-building for sustainable land management and availability of volunteers from outside the region. Nevertheless, conflict arose in relation to governance, originating from the recognized difficulties of reconciling a diversity of allegiances, motivations, management styles and personalities, and resulted in division of BBR into two, one section being managed largely through the private sector and community volunteers, the other (renamed Riverland Biosphere Reserve) coordinated by a committee with more diverse affiliations. Bioregionalism can play a role in biosphere reserves but motivations and resources of external public and private organizations are also vital. Avoiding weaknesses of bioregional approaches requires greater attention to social aspects of environmental management. Governance structures and processes need to be inclusive, flexible and equitable in decision making and access to funds. They should support both agency and community-initiated activities and include conflict resolution mechanisms.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 2008

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aberley, D. (1999) Interpreting bioregionalism: a story from many voices. In: Bioregionalism, ed. McGinnis, M.V., pp. 1342. London, UK: Routledge.Google Scholar
Alexander, D. (1990) Bioregionalism: science or sensibility? Environmental Ethics 12: 161174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderies, J.M., Janssen, M.A. & Ostrom, E. (2004) A framework to analyse the robustness of socio-ecological systems from an institutional perspective. Ecology and Society 9: 1834.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anon. (2001) The Mornington Peninsula and Western Port Biosphere Project Brochure. Mornington, VIC, Australia.Google Scholar
Anon. (2004) Australia provides more support for wetland conservation. Marine Pollution Bulletin 48 (5–6): 415416.Google Scholar
Australian Bureau of Statistics (2001) Census of Population and Housing. Canberra, Australia: Australian Bureau of Statistics.Google Scholar
Australian Landscape Trust (2005) Australian Landscape Trust [www document]. URL http://www.austlandscapetrust.org.au/Google Scholar
Baker-Gabb, D. (2004) Gluepot Reserve Plan of Management. Gluepot Reserve, Australia: Birds Australia.Google Scholar
Batisse, M. (1982) The Biosphere Reserve: a tool for environmental conservation and management. Environmental Conservation 9: 101113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berg, P. & Dasmann, R. (1977) Reinhabiting California. Ecologist 7: 399401.Google Scholar
Berthold-Bond, D. (2000) The ethics of ‘place’: reflections on bioregionalism. Environmental Ethics 22: 524.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blaikie, N. (2000) Designing Social Research. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Bookmark Biosphere Incorporated (2003) Draft constitution. Bookmark, Biosphere Trust, Berri, Australia.Google Scholar
Bookmark Biosphere Trust (1995–1999) Bookmark Biosphere Action Plan. Bookmark, Biosphere Trust, Berri, Australia.Google Scholar
Bookmark Biosphere Trust (1997) Bookmark develops international relationships. Bookmark Bulletin 6: 2.Google Scholar
Bookmark Biosphere Trust (2002 a) Annual report. Bookmark Biosphere Trust, Berri, Australia.Google Scholar
Bookmark Biosphere Trust (2002 b) Periodic review. Berri, Australia: Bookmark Biosphere ReserveGoogle Scholar
Brunckhorst, D.J. (2000 a) Bioregional Planning Beyond the New Millennium. Amsterdam, the Netherlands: Harwood.Google Scholar
Brunckhorst, D.J. (2000 b) Synergies for social, ecological, and economic recovery on newly-created commons. In: Constituting the Commons: Crafting Sustainable Commons in the New Millennium, the Eighth Conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Property, Digital Library of the Commons Bloomington, Indiana, USA: University of Indiana. [www document]. URL http://dlc.dlib.indiana.edu/archive/00000230/Google Scholar
Brunckhorst, D.J. (2001) Building capital through bioregional planning and biosphere reserves. Ethics in Science and Environmental Politics 2001: 1932.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brunckhorst, D.J., Bridgewater, P. & Parker, P. (1997) The UNESCO Biosphere Reserve Program comes of age: learning by doing, landscape models for sustainable conservation and resource use. In: Conservation Outside Reserves, ed. Hale, P.. & Lamb, D., pp. 176182. Brisbane, Australia: University of Queensland Press.Google Scholar
Caldwell, L.K. (1970) The ecosystem as a criterion for public land policy. Natural Resources Journal 10: 203221.Google Scholar
Carr, M. (2004) Bioregionalism and Civil Society. Vancouver, Canada: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Cleaver, F. (2001) Institutions, agency and the limitations of participatory approaches to development. In: Participation. The New Tyranny?, ed. Cook, B.. & Kothari, U., pp. 3655. London, UK: Zed Books Ltd.Google Scholar
Cottam, E. (2002) Executive Officer's report. Bookmark Bulletin 16: 4.Google Scholar
Cottam, E. (2003) Bookmark Biosphere Reserve: a governance model. Australian Biosphere Reserve News July 2003: 10–11.Google Scholar
Crowfoot, J.E. & Wondolleck, J.M. (1990) Environmental Disputes: Community Involvement in Conflict Resolution. Washington DC, USA: Island Press.Google Scholar
Dasmann, R.F. (1959) Environmental Conservation. New York, NY, USA: John Wiley & Sons.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dasmann, R.F. (1972 a) Planet in Peril. Man and the Biosphere Today. New York, NY, USA: World Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Dasmann, R.F. (1972 b) Towards a system for classifying natural regions of the world and their representation by National Parks and reserves. Biological Conservation 4: 247255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dasmann, R.F. (1988) Biosphere reserves, buffers and boundaries. Bioscience 38: 487489.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dasmann, R.F. (1995) Bioregion. In: Conservation and Environmentalism: an Encyclopedia, ed. Paelhke, R., pp. 8385. New York, NY, USA: Garland.Google Scholar
Department of Environment and Heritage (2005 a) Calperum and Taylorville Stations [www document]. URL http://www.deh.gov.au/parks/biosphere/riverland/index.htmlGoogle Scholar
Department of Environment and Heritage (2005 b) Riverland Biosphere Reserve [www document]. URL http://www.deh.gov.au/parks/biosphere/reserves/river.htmlGoogle Scholar
Diffenderfer, M. & Birch, D. (1997) Bioregionalism: a comparative study of the Adirondacks and the Sierra Nevada. Society and Natural Resources 10: 316.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Director of National Parks (2001) Annual Report Part C. Department of Environment and Heritage, Canberra, Australia.Google Scholar
Director of National Parks (2003) Annual report [www document]. URL http://www.deh.gov.au/parks/publications/annual/02-03/calperum.htmlGoogle Scholar
Director of National Parks (2004) Annual report [www document]. URL http://www.deh.gov.au/parks/publications/annual/03-04/calperum.htmlGoogle Scholar
Dodge, J. (1981) Living by life: some bioregional theory and practice. Coevolution Quarterly 32: 512.Google Scholar
Figgis, P. (2004) Conservation on Private Lands: the Australian Experience. Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK: IUCN.Google Scholar
Frenkel, S. (1994) Old theories in new places: environmental determinism and bioregionalism. Professional Geographer 46: 289295.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gluepot Reserve Birds Australia (2006) Development of a biological monitoring framework for Gluepot Reserve. Current status and recommendations. Birds Australia, South Australia.Google Scholar
Grumbine, E. (1990) Protecting biological diversity through the greater ecosystem concept. Natural Areas 10: 114120.Google Scholar
Grumbine, R.E. (1994) What is ecosystem management? Conservation Biology 8: 2738.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harril, R. (1999) Beyond sustainability: bioregionalism and bioregional planning. In: Preserving the Legacy. Concepts in Support of Sustainability, ed. Noble, A.G. &. Costa, F.J., pp. 207222. Lexington, NY, USA: Lexington Books.Google Scholar
Klyza, C.M. (1999) Bioregional possibilities in Vermont. In: Bioregionalism, ed. McGinnis, M.V., pp. 8199. London, UK: Routledge.Google Scholar
Krishna, A.K., Chhetri, S. & Singh, K.K. (2002) Human dimensions of conservation in the Khangchendzonga Biosphere Reserve. Mountain Research and Development 22: 328331.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kumar, N., Stern, L.W. & Anderson, J.C. (1993) Conducting interorganizational research using key informants. The Academy of Management Journal 36: 16331651.Google Scholar
Leach, W.D. & Pelkey, N.W. (2001) Making watershed partnerships work: a review of the empirical literature. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management 127: 378385.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, M.W. (1992) Green Delusions. An Environmentalist Critique of Radical Environmentalism. Durham, NC, USA and London, UK: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Lipschutz, R.D. (1999) Bioregionalism, civil society and global environmental governance. In: Bioregionalism, ed. McGinnis, V.M., pp. 101120. London, UK: Routledge.Google Scholar
, Y.H., Chen, L.D., Fu, B.J. & Liu, S.L. (2003) A framework for evaluating the effectiveness of protected areas: the case of Wolong Biosphere Reserve. Landscape and Urban Planning 63: 213223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maikhuri, R.K., Nautiyal, S., Rao, K. & Saxena, K.G. (2001) Conservation policy-people conflicts: a case study from Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve (a World Heritage Site), India. Forest Policy and Economics 2: 355365.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maikhuri, R.K., Nautiyal, S., Rao, K.S., Chandrasekhar, K., Gavali, R. & Saxena, K.G. (2000) Analysis and resolution of protected area-people conflicts in Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve, India. Environmental Conservation 27: 4353.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Matysek, K.A., Stratford, E. & Kriwowken, L.E. (2006) The UNESCO Biosphere Reserve Program in Australia: constraints and opportunities for localised sustainable development. The Canadian Geographer 50: 85100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGinnis, M.V. (1999) A rehearsal to bioregionalism. In: Bioregionalism, ed. McGinnis, M.V., pp. 19. London, UK: Routledge.Google Scholar
McGinnis, M.V., House, F. & Jordan, W. (1999) Bioregional restoration: re-establishing an ecology of shared identity. In: Bioregionalism, ed. McGinnis, M.V., pp. 205222. London, UK: Routledge.Google Scholar
McTaggart, W.D. (1993) Bioregionalism and regional geography: place, people, and networks. Canadian Geographer-Geographe Canadien 37: 307319.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
National Parks and Wildlife (Bookmark Biosphere Reserve Trust) Amendment Bill (1998) Amendment Bill. Canberra, Australia: Commonwealth of Australia.Google Scholar
Negi, C.S. & Nautiyal, S. (2003) Indigenous peoples, biological diversity and protected area management - policy framework towards resolving conflicts. International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology 10: 169179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Noss, R.F. (1983) A regional landscape approach to maintain diversity. Bioscience 33: 700706.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Noss, R.F. (1992) The Wildlands Project: land conservation strategy. Wild Earth SI 1: 1025.Google Scholar
Ostrom, E. (1990) Governing the Commons: the Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parsons, J.J. (1985) On ‘bioregionalism’ and ‘watershed consciousness’. Professional Geographer 37: 16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
PATA Task Force (1996) Tourism Through Conservation: the Bookmark Way. Kings Cross, NSW, Australia: Pacific Asia Travel Association.Google Scholar
Platt, J. (1988) What can case studies do? Studies in Qualitative Methodology 1: 123Google Scholar
Poncelet, E.C. (2004) Partnering for the Environment. Multistakeholder Collaboration in a Changing World. Oxford, UK: Rowan & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Price, M.F. (1996) People in biosphere reserves: an evolving concept. Society and Natural Resources 9: 645654.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Primary Industries and Resources SA (2007) Salinity impacts of low river flows in the South Australian Riverland. Fact Sheet 5 [www document]. URL http://www.pir.sa.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0019/56062/Salinity_impacts_of_low_Murray_River_flows_SA.pdfGoogle Scholar
Richards, M. (1996) Protected areas, people and incentives in the search for sustainable forest conservation in Honduras. Environmental Conservation 23: 207217.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
River Murray Catchment Water Management Board (2002) Water Allocation Plan for the River Murray Prescribed Watercourse. Berri, Australia: Government of South Australia.Google Scholar
Riverland Wine Industry Development Council (2007) The home of Australia's most popular wine [www document]. URL http://www.riverlandwine.com.au/Google Scholar
Sale, K. (1985) Dwellers in the Land: the Bioregional Vision. San Francisco, CA, USA: Sierra Club Books.Google Scholar
Schramm, G. (1980) Integrated river basin planning in a holistic universe. Natural Resources Journal 20: 787806.Google Scholar
Slocombe, D.S. (1993 a) Environmental planning, ecosystem science and ecosystem approaches for integrating environment and development. Environmental Management 17: 2889–303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slocombe, D.S. (1993 b) Implementing ecosystem-based management. Bioscience 43: 612622.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Snyder, G. (1969) Earth Household. New York, NY, USA: New Directions Books.Google Scholar
South Australian Tourism Commission (2007) Riverland. South Australia [www document]. URL http://www.riverland.info/home.aspGoogle Scholar
Sundberg, J. (2003) Conservation and democratization: constituting citizenship in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala. Political Geography 22: 715740.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, B. (2000 a) Bioregionalism: an ethics of loyalty to place. Landscape Journal 19: 5072.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, B. (2000 b) Deep ecology and its social philosophy: a critique. In: Beneath the Surface. Critical Essays in the Philosophy of Deep Ecology, ed. Katz, E., Light, A. & Rothenberg, D., pp. 269299. Cambridge, USA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Thackway, R. & Cresswell, I.D. (1997) A bioregional framework for planning the national system of protected areas in Australia. Natural Areas Journal 17: 241247.Google Scholar
Thomashow, M. (1999) Toward a cosmopolitan bioregionalism. In: Bioregionalism, ed. McGinnis, M.V., pp. 121132. London, UK: Routledge.Google Scholar
Totaltravel.com (2007) Central Riverland sports clubs [www document]. URL http://www.totaltravel.com.au/travel/sa/riverlands/centralriverland/directory/sportGoogle Scholar
Udvardy, M. (1975) A Classification of the Biogeographical Provinces of the World. Morges, Switzerland: IUCN Occasional Paper 18: 48 pp.Google Scholar
UNESCO (1970) Plan for a long-term intergovernmental and interdisciplinary program on Man and the Biosphere. Document 16/C78. UNESCO, Paris, France.Google Scholar
UNESCO (1974) Task force on: criteria and guidelines for the choice and establishment of biosphere reserves. MAB Report Series No. 22. UNESCO, Paris, France.Google Scholar
UNESCO (1996) Biosphere reserves: the Seville strategy and the statutory framework of the world network. Man and the Biosphere Programme, Paris, France.Google Scholar
UNESCO. (2005) MAB Biosphere reserves directory [www document]. URL http://www2.unesco.org/mab/br/brdir/directory/biores.asp?mode=all&Code=AUL+11Google Scholar
van Newkirk, A. (1975) Bioregions: towards bioregional strategy for human cultures. Environmental Conservation 2: 108119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, J. (1993) Fostering community support for the Fitzgerald River Biosphere Reserve, Western-Australia. Nature and Resources 29: 2428.Google Scholar
Wondolleck, J. & Yaffee, S. (2000) Making Collaboration Work. Lessons in Natural Resource Management. Washington, DC, USA: Island Press.Google Scholar
Yaffee, S.L. (1996) Ecosystem management in practice: the importance of human institutions. Ecological Applications 6: 724727.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yaffee, S.L. (1999) Three faces of ecosystem management. Conservation Biology 13: 713725.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yaffee, S.L., Phillips, A.F., Frentz, I.C., Hardy, P.W., Maleki, A.M. & Thorpe, B.E. (1996) Ecosystem Management in the United States. An Assessment of Current Experience. Washington, DC, USA: Island Press.Google Scholar
Yin, R. (2003) Case Study Research Design: Design and Method. Thousand Oaks, CA, USA: Sage.Google Scholar
Young, E. (1999) Local people and conservaton in Mexico's El Vizcaino Biosphere Reserve. The Geographical Review 89: 364392.Google Scholar