Cover art for Cultivating Community
Published
Sydney University Press, September 2024
ISBN
9781743329771
Format
Softcover, 290 pages
Dimensions
21cm × 14.8cm

Cultivating Community How discourse shapes the philosophy, practice and policy of water management in the Murray-Darling Basin

1 IN STOCK
Ships Wednesday 06th!
Fast $7.95 flat-rate shipping!
Only pay $7.95 per order within Australia, including end-to-end parcel tracking.
100% encrypted and secure
We adhere to industry best practice and never store credit card details.
Talk to real people
Contact us seven days a week – our staff are here to help.

In the face of escalating water scarcity, effective water management has become a central concern globally. The MurrayDarling Basin, spanning over a million square kilometres across four states and one territory, is a lifeline for Australian agriculture and rural communities.

Cultivating Community: How discourse shapes the philosophy, practice and policy of water management in the MurrayDarling Basin dissects the prevailing environmental discourses shaping water policy in the MurrayDarling Basin and assesses their implications for both the environment and for farming communities.

Drawing on five months of extensive field research among farmers and MurrayDarling Basin Authority officials, Dr Amanda Shankland presents a nuanced understanding of farmer perspectives within the broader policy discourse. By examining the interplay between environmental discourses and farmer knowledge, Shankland sheds light on how different ideologies shape policy decisions and, subsequently, impact water management practices.

Central to the book's contribution is the identification and analysis of four key environmental discourses prevalent in the MurrayDarling Basin: administrative rationalism, economic rationalism, democratic pragmatism, and green environmentalism.

Against the backdrop of looming water scarcity and the declining health of the MurrayDarling Basin, Cultivating Community challenges these dominant discourses by highlighting a new perspective, community centrism, which emphasises community-based cooperation and engagement in water management. By amplifying farmer voices and advocating for a more inclusive approach to policy deliberations, Cultivating Community paves the way for alternative futures in water management that prioritise social values alongside economic and environmental considerations.

Cultivating Community is a timely and indispensable resource for charting a path towards a more resilient and equitable water future in the MurrayDarling Basin and beyond.

Related books