The cost of collaboration: how caring for our country has shaped regional natural resource management in an Australian river catchment
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Benham, C. F
Beavis, S. G
Hussey, Karen
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Taylor & Francis
Abstract
Funding arrangements for Natural Resource Management (NRM) in Australia have
undergone a number of changes in the last decade, including the transition from the
Natural Heritage Trust (NHT) to the Caring for Our Country (CfoC) program (recently
merged with Landcare to become the National Landcare Programme). It has been
suggested that CfoC eroded some of the gains in regional autonomy, community
engagement and goodwill made under the NHT. This article presents the results of
research conducted with regional NRM bodies and community-based stakeholders in
the Upper Murrumbidgee catchment, south-eastern Australia. It explores the impacts of
the CfoC grants structure on NRM bodies and communities, and examines the practical
responses of resource managers to funding constraints. The research demonstrates that
the structure of NRM funding delivery under CfoC played a key role in shaping the
strategic and operational activities of regional NRM bodies and community groups. In
particular, the short-term, single-issue focus of the program placed pressure on
collaborations between regional NRM bodies and other groups, and could inhibit
strategic and integrated approaches to NRM. At the same time, however, NRM
planners and community stakeholders have actively managed the limitations of the
CfoC structure to optimise catchment outcomes for communities and the environment.
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Australasian Journal of Environmental Management