Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand abstracts
Ecotourism, local and indigenous people, and the conservation of the
Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area
J. B. Kirkpatrick*
*School of Geography and Environmental Studies, University
of Tasmania, Box 252-78, GPO, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 7001.
The existence of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area (WHA) is not only
a testimony to its undoubted outstanding universal natural and cultural
significance, but also a reflection of a national feeling that its wild places
and wild rivers should be maintained for future generations, rather than
expended in hydroelectric, forestry, and pastoral development. The issue in the
establishment and expansion of the WHA was economic development or none. In the
cases of power, wood, and wool production the nays succeeded convincingly. The
coalition that promoted the WHA consisted largely of wilderness
recreationalists and natural scientists, leading to a feeling, and partial
actuality, of dispossession on the part of those recreationalists, such as
shooters, anglers, off-road vehicle enthusiasts, and horse riders, who defined
themselves as traditional users. Recreationalists who were within the
coalition, mainly bushwalkers, climbers, cavers, and rafters, have had
increasing effects on the natural values of the WHA, to the degree to which
limitation of some of their activities seems necessary to maintain WHA values.
Yet, any such controls have been strongly resisted. Tourism developers,
traditional recreationalists, and many coalition recreationalists all wish to
maintain or increase activities that are in conflict with the maintenance of
the values of the WHA and/or with each other. The current management plan
attempted to resolve these conflicts through compromises that do not
substantially affect the values, but which lack any effective mechanisms for
accountability on the part of the management agency and its minister. Despite a
prolonged and complicated developmental approval process, there is no means
whereby the public may appeal a ministerial decision on the grounds that it is
in conflict with the general objectives of the plan. This is particularly
alarming given progressive commercialisation of activities in the WHA. The WHA
will continue to effectively conserve and present its values if the general
public sympathy for its maintenance is expressed through an effective appeals
process. There is also no reason why the minority of developers and the public
who are not sympathetic to all aspects of the maintenance of its values, should
not gain some benefits from the area, within the constraints of ecological
sustainability.
Keywords conflicts; management; Tasmania; tourism;
traditional use; world heritage area
R00018 Received 22 July 2000; accepted 23 May 2001
(c) Journal of The Royal Society of New Zealand,
Volume 31, Number 4, December 2001, pp 819-829
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (825K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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