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Learning conservation: the role of conservation covenants in landscape redesign at Project Hindmarsh, Victoria

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 02:48 authored by Chris Harrington, Ruth Lane, David MercerDavid Mercer
Biodiversity decline continues apace across the Australian landscape with a pressing need to redesign land use to address this situation. The significance of private land increasingly is recognised for the protection and enhancement of biodiversity as landholders inevitably make decisions that affect environmental quality. Biodiversity conservation is as much a social process as a physical one. Conservation covenants are perpetual agreements under which landholders choose to conserve land voluntarily, primarily for conservation purposes. The role covenants might play in landscape-scale conservation was investigated in north-western Victoria. In-depth interviews with a range of participants were undertaken, with an emphasis on the role covenantors might play as social learning and cultural change agents. Analysis of these interviews offers useful perspectives for understanding socio-cultural dimensions of landscape change and exploring the differing values of production farmers and nature conservation landholders. Consideration is then given to approaches to engaging local production farmers in nature covenants and promoting communication between this group and the largely non-production conservationists who currently form the mainstay of conservation covenants.

History

Journal

Australian Geographer

Volume

37

Issue

2

Start page

187

End page

209

Total pages

23

Publisher

Routledge

Place published

Abingdon

Language

English

Copyright

© 2006 Geographical Society of New South Wales Inc.

Former Identifier

2006000230

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2009-02-27

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