At the meeting of the Society for Conservation Biology (Oceania) in Brisbane, July 2016, Bob Pressey led a symposium on recent weakening of the Australia protected-area system. Examples of weakening include legal changes to boundaries or allowed uses, but there are many other examples, typically under the public’s radar, of weakening without legal changes. The symposium was followed by a writing workshop at O’Reilly’s resort in the Border Ranges, south-east of Brisbane, from Saturday 9th to Monday 11th of July. The workshop developed an outline of a journal paper on the ways in which governments undermine the effectiveness of protected areas, and corresponding ways in which undermining can be reversed to achieve better outcomes for biodiversity. The workshop identified 15 ways of weakening (or, if we choose, strengthening) protected areas.
Published by Bob Pressey
Professor Bob Pressey is a Distinguished Professor in the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies. He leads the Centre’s research program on Conservation Planning. Bob’s research team focuses on spatial solutions to diverse resource management problems, involving the design of conservation areas and applications of a variety of conservation actions. View all posts by Bob Pressey