The challenge of being heard : understanding Wadawurrung climate change vulnerability and adaptive capacity
Version 2 2024-06-17, 19:45Version 2 2024-06-17, 19:45
Version 1 2016-07-29, 15:27Version 1 2016-07-29, 15:27
chapter
posted on 2024-06-17, 19:45authored byD Jones, D Low Choy, P Clarke, S Serrao-Neumann, R Hales, O Koschade
For the original residents and 'landscape planners' of the Australian continent, the some 60,000 years of accumulated ecological knowledge of the patterns and transformations of this continent held the memories and ecological knowledge of its Australian Aboriginal custodians and Elders. Much of this extensive oral knowledge is little listened to, heard, respected, nor incorporated into the Western land use planning literature that seek to guide development and management pressures borne out of some 200 years of local knowledge appreciation and a plethora of northern hemisphere knowledge uniformed by ecological responsibility and self. While extensive planning schemes, development plans, and management plans have been prepared, gazetted and embodied in law, they lack the testament of time and the lore of knowledge longevity.
History
Chapter number
15
Pagination
1-21
ISBN-13
9781317162247
ISBN-10
1317162242
Language
eng
Publication classification
B Book chapter, B1 Book chapter
Copyright notice
2016, The Authors
Extent
15
Editor/Contributor(s)
Kennedy M, Butt A, Amati M
Publisher
Routledge
Place of publication
New York, N.Y.
Title of book
Conflict and change in Australia’s peri-urban landscapes