McDonald et al 2016.pdf (126.18 kB)
Download fileRethinking legal objectives for climate-adaptive conservation
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 19:35 authored by Janet McDonaldJanet McDonald, Phillipa McCormackPhillipa McCormack, Aysha FlemingAysha Fleming, Harris, RMB, Michael LockwoodMichael LockwoodThis paper examines conservation objectives in Australian law in the context of climate change. The rate of climate change and the scale and extent of its impacts on natural systems drive the need to re-evaluate current conservation objectives, from basic concept definitions, to overarching goals and values, to the way they are operationalized at all levels. We outline the case for reform of objectives in the legal framework for conservation and discuss three key strategies that would facilitate this transition: (1) acknowledgment in conservation law of system dynamism; (2) focus on ecosystem function, stability, and resilience; and (3) an explicit recognition that systems operate across multiple scales. Law reform is a slow process, but the potential of climate change to drive transformational changes means that urgent action is needed to overcome the limitations of current objectives and in the legal framework itself.
Funding
Department of Environment and Energy (Cwth)
History
Publication title
Ecology and SocietyVolume
21Article number
25Number
25Pagination
1-10ISSN
1708-3087Department/School
Faculty of LawPublisher
Resilience Alliance PublicationsPlace of publication
CanadaRights statement
Copyright 2016 by the author(s). Published here under license by the Resilience AllianceRepository Status
- Open