E-Book, Englisch, Band 22, 218 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Advances in Natural and Technological Hazards Research
Australia's National Drought Policy
E-Book, Englisch, Band 22, 218 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Advances in Natural and Technological Hazards Research
ISBN: 978-1-4020-3124-3
Verlag: Springer Netherland
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Living in the Australian Environment.- Climate and Drought in the Subtropics: The Australian Example.- Indigenous Water Philosophy in an Uncertain Land.- Late Twentieth Century Approaches to Living with Uncertainty: The National Drought Policy.- Managing Risk?: Social Policy Responses in Time of Drought.- Drought, News Media and Policy Debate.- At the Intersection of Science and Politics: Defining Exceptional Drought.- Drought Risk as a Negotiated Construct.- Prospects for Insuring Against Drought in Australia.- Policy for Agricultural Drought in Australia: An Economics Perspective.- Drought Policy and Preparedness: The Australian Experience in an International Context.- Lessons for Australia and Beyond.
CHAPTER 12: LESSONS FOR AUSTRALIA AND BEYOND (p.177-178)
LINDA COURTENAY BOTTERILL
1. Introduction
Australia has had its National Drought Policy in place for more than a decade. It is therefore timely to consider the strengths and weaknesses of the policy approach that was adopted in 1992 and to draw some lessons for Australia and other countries considering an integrated policy response to drought. Many of the lessons outlined below apply particularly to industrialised countries in which the farm sector is diminishing in importance, in terms of its contribution to GDP, and in which drought does not result in widespread human disasters such as famine.
In summary, policy makers in Australia in 1992 attempted to align attitudes towards drought with the reality of a highly variable climate. The move from a disaster response to an approach based on self-reliance and risk management was based in a recognition that Australian farmers should expect droughts to occur and should factor drought risk into their business decisions. In economic and policy terms, the recommendations of the Drought Policy Review Task Force which reported in 1990 and the direction of the National Drought Policy announced in 1992 were coherent and logical and would allow the farm sector to operate efficiently and productively within the constraints of the Australian climate. However, drought responses are not only concerned with economic and policy coherence - they are developed in a specific socio-political context.
The following section discusses the context of Australia’s drought response and highlights some of the tensions which arise between different policy objectives and different values within the Australian community and the problems that have arisen in the implementation of the National Drought Policy. The final section identifies the lessons from which Australian policy makers and their counterparts elsewhere in the world can draw in considering future drought responses.
2. Tensions within the National Drought Policy
The collection of papers in this book attempts to illustrate the range of issues that need to be considered by policy makers if they are to develop an equitable, affordable and rational drought response. There are several perspectives at play. First, drought can be considered literally from the ground up. This is the way Australia’s indigenous people managed their available water. As Deborah Rose points out in her chapter, ‘people sought to enhance water’s capacity to nourish life without seeking radically to alter the water conditions of their country or, cumulatively, of the continent’. Rose describes a way of life in which people are ‘of the land’ rather than ‘on the land’. This is a view of Australian climate which does not conceptualise climate ‘events’ such as drought as inherently transgressive - the climate just is.
However, the arrival of Europeans on this continent brought with it the introduction of a form of agriculture developed for a more predictable climate cycle. This type of farming provides the second perspective - that of the hard-working farmer struggling against the elements. Land reforms in the mid-nineteenth century resulted in the development of small-scale family farming and a push to closer settlements which persisted well into the twentieth century. These developments were associated with an agrarian view of agriculture which carried with it moral and identity issues relating to the role of farming as intrinsically valuable and special in comparison with other economic activities. Interestingly this perception of farming as an essential activity persists in industrialised countries, even when farming activity is now only a small contributor to national wealth and food shortages are a remote and unpleasant memory.