Conflicts over the use of outdoor environments arise when different groups hold incompatible values about how environments should be used, protected, or managed. This KK requires you to understand both the methods used by stakeholders to influence decisions in their favour AND the formal processes by which land managers attempt to resolve conflicts.
Individuals and groups use a range of methods to influence environmental decisions:
| Method | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Political lobbying | Direct engagement with politicians and decision-makers | Industry groups meeting ministers |
| Legal action | Court challenges, injunctions, judicial review | Environmental law groups challenging approvals |
| Media campaigns | Press releases, social media, documentaries | Wilderness Society media campaigns |
| Public protest | Marches, rallies, blockades, civil disobedience | Franklin River blockade |
| Scientific advocacy | Peer-reviewed research, expert submissions | University researchers submitting to inquiries |
| Community organising | Building coalitions, petition drives | Local groups mobilising against local developments |
| Economic arguments | Cost–benefit analysis, tourism value studies | Tourism operators arguing for non-extractive use |
| Cultural/heritage arguments | Citing Indigenous cultural significance | RAPs opposing developments near heritage sites |
Commercial native forest logging in Victoria’s Central Highlands and East Gippsland pitted timber industry interests (jobs, economic output) against conservation interests (biodiversity, old-growth protection, water catchment integrity) and Indigenous cultural heritage.
Key stakeholders:
- VicForests (government logging agency) and timber workers — pro-logging
- Environment East Gippsland, Wilderness Society, Environmental Justice Australia — anti-logging
- Gunaikurnai Land and Waters Council — cultural heritage concerns
- Parks Victoria, Melbourne Water — mixed (some forests are water catchments)
Conservation advocates:
- Legal action: Environmental Justice Australia and others launched multiple Federal Court challenges under the EPBC Act against logging in threatened species habitat (Leadbeater’s possum, greater glider habitat).
- Scientific advocacy: Researchers including Professor David Lindenmayer (ANU) published peer-reviewed evidence on old-growth forest carbon stores, biodiversity value, and water yield, influencing public and political opinion.
- Media campaigns: Documentary films, social media, photojournalism of logging coupes.
- Economic arguments: Studies showing water catchment value of intact forests exceeds timber value.
Industry/pro-logging:
- Political lobbying: Direct engagement with state government ministers; argument about regional employment.
- Community organising: Timber towns (Orbost, Yarram) campaigns about job losses.
- Economic arguments: State Treasury modelling on industry contribution.
KEY TAKEAWAY: The logging conflict in Victoria was resolved through a combination of legal pressure (court challenges), scientific evidence, economic analysis, and ultimately political decision. The formal resolution mechanism was the government’s transition policy, supported by independent reviews.
The Alpine National Park (Victoria, ~646,000 ha) hosts significant populations of feral horses (brumbies) — estimated 10,000–13,000 animals across the Victorian Alps. The conflict is between:
Key stakeholders:
- Parks Victoria — land manager
- Victorian Brumby Association, Heritage Horse Alliance — pro-brumby
- Invasive Species Council, Australian Alps Liaison Committee — pro-removal
- Scientific community (ANU researchers, ecologists) — pro-removal
- Traditional Owners — horses damage cultural heritage sites in the Alps
Conservation advocates:
- Scientific evidence: Research quantifying bog degradation, erosion rates, species impacts.
- Legal arguments: That Parks Victoria has obligations under the National Parks Act to manage pests.
- Media: Drone footage of damaged alpine bogs generating public concern.
Brumby advocates:
- Political lobbying: Direct engagement with state parliament; private members’ bills.
- Community mobilisation: Large rallies in Melbourne; petition campaigns.
- Cultural/heritage arguments: ‘Brumbies are part of Australian heritage.’
- Legislative action: In NSW, the Kosciuszko Wild Horse Heritage Act 2018 was passed — a remarkable case of cultural lobbying successfully legislating the protection of a feral species.
EXAM TIP: The brumby conflict is excellent for exam use because it involves a genuine clash between cultural/heritage values and ecological science — not simply conservation vs economy. Examiners reward nuanced analysis of why parties disagree, not just what they want.
Land managers use a range of formal processes to resolve conflicts:
| Process | Description |
|---|---|
| Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) | Systematic assessment of proposed activities’ environmental impacts; public comment period |
| Ministerial inquiry | Government-commissioned independent review |
| Stakeholder consultation | Formal public meetings, submissions process |
| Regional Forest Agreements | Negotiated 20-year agreements between federal and state governments |
| Joint management plans | Co-developed plans between Parks Victoria and Traditional Owners |
| Mediation | Facilitated negotiation between conflicting parties |
| Judicial review | Courts can review administrative decisions on legal grounds |
VCAA FOCUS: You must describe methods used by both sides of a conflict (not just one), evaluate their effectiveness, AND describe the formal processes used by land managers. A one-sided account misses half the marks.