Fashioning Australia's Forests

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 1995 - Gardening - 312 pages
For more than twenty years, Australia's forests have been the subject of angry controversy. Industry groups, timber towns, professional foresters, trade unions, economists, developers and environmentalists have all voiced different proposals, based on mutually exclusive values. Major battles have aroused intense passions and influenced elections. But the book not only covers recent events; it reviews forest management from Aboriginal times, demonstrating that the forests and our conceptions of them are socially constructed Dr Dargavel weaves together the story of industrial development and forest use with the slow acceptance of the case for forest conservancy. He shows how various 'resource regimes' evolved, and how they fashioned the forests in different ways-ecologically, spatially and socially. He then describes the challenges to these established patterns since the 1970s--industrial restructuring, woodchip exports, unsustainable harvesting, and the rise of the environmental movement. The book concludes with the prospects for the forests, their industries and workers, in a highly uncertain future. Australians must choose between travelling the "low road" of apathetic submission to market forces and ignorance and taking a long, hard "high road" towards sustainable development in which both social and environmental needs are taken seriously. The issues discussed will interest those involved in forestry, historical geography, and environmental sciences, history, and politics.

From inside the book

Contents

FASHIONING 1850s TO 1960s
15
CHANGING 1970s TO 1980s
81
CONTESTING FROM THE 1970s
161
Copyright

4 other sections not shown

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About the author (1995)

Dr John Dargavel is a Fellow in the Centre for Resource and Environmental Studies at the Australian National University who has also worked in government and industrial forest management. He has edited several books on forest history and policy and has published extensively on forest science, management, economic, and employment issues.

Bibliographic information