Beyond the North-South Culture Wars: Reconciling Northern Australia's Recent Past With Its Future (SpringerBriefs in Geography)
معرفی کتاب «Beyond the North-South Culture Wars: Reconciling Northern Australia's Recent Past With Its Future (SpringerBriefs in Geography)» نوشتهٔ Allan Dale (auth.)، منتشرشده توسط نشر Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer در سال 2014. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
Increasingly, Australia’s agriculturalists are looking to the nation’s north to escape the decline in southern Australia’s water and soil resources. Booming mineral and gas development is also helping to drive the nation’s economic success. At the same time, the south’s conservation sector would like to see much of the north preserved as iconic wilderness. Both conservation and resource development interests alike are often at odds with the interests of the north’s traditional owners, many of whom remain trapped in welfare dependency and poverty. Indeed, to the ire of north Australians, the past five decades of north Australian history have indeed been characterized by these national-scale conflicts being played out in regional and local communities. This book explores these conflicts as well as the many emerging opportunities facing the development of the north, suggesting that a strong cultural divide between northern and southern Australia exists; one that needs to be reconciled if the nation as a whole is to benefit from northern development. The author first explores where these historical conflicts could take us without a clear forward agenda. A story-based personal narrative from his long and diverse experience in the north gives life to these themes. Finally, the book then draws on these stories to help shape a cohesive agenda for the north’s future. Increasingly, Australia's agriculturalists are looking to the nation's north to escape the decline in southern Australia's water and soil resources. Booming mineral and gas development is also helping to drive the nation's economic success. At the same time, the south's conservation sector would like to see much of the north preserved as iconic wilderness. Both conservation and resource development interests alike are often at odds with the interests of the north's traditional owners, many of whom remain trapped in welfare dependency and poverty. Indeed, to the ire of north Australians, the past four decades of north Australian history have indeed been characterized by these national-scale conflicts being played out in regional and local communities. This book explores these conflicts as well as the many emerging opportunities facing the development of the north, suggesting that a strong cultural divide between northern and southern Australia exists; one that needs to be reconciled if the nation as a whole is to benefit from northern development. The author first explores where these historical conflicts could take us without a clear forward agenda. A story-based personal narrative from my long and diverse experience in the north gives life to these themes. Finally, the book then draws on these stories to help shape a cohesive agenda for the north's future Front Matter....Pages i-xviii Front Matter....Pages 1-1 Themes in the North’s Recent History....Pages 3-12 Understanding the North–South Cultural Divide....Pages 13-25 Front Matter....Pages 27-27 Southern Enclaves: Mining, Tourism and Urban Development....Pages 29-40 World Heritage and the Northern Psyche....Pages 41-51 Individualism and the Northern Cattle Industry....Pages 53-61 Partnerships and Prawns: Co-Management and the Key to Success....Pages 63-71 Northern Blackfellas and Southern Migaloos....Pages 73-84 Larry’s Story: What Climate Means for Northern Development....Pages 85-97 Front Matter....Pages 99-99 Towards Endemic Regionalism in Northern Australia....Pages 101-111 Trading Ecosystem Services Across the North....Pages 113-123 Beyond Indigenous Disadvantage....Pages 125-136 Looking Past the North–South Divide....Pages 137-148
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