Output list
Book
Community Voices: Creating sustainable spaces
Published 2006
Community Voices: Creating Sustainable Spaces focuses on the way people come together in community groups to achieve sustainable outcomes. It uses a series of Western Australian case studies to examine a range of projects and campaigns. Locations are a mix of urban and rural communities, and examples of projects explored are the Western Australian Forest Campaign, Saving the Moore River Campaign and Children Caring for our Coastline. Grouped by theme, issues covered include community recognition and empowerment, Indigenous approaches to sustainability, political ecology, funding, organisational issues and leadership. It explores varied approaches to community sustainability and highlights successes and failures of previous projects and campaigns.
Book
Why salt ? : Harry Whittington, OAM and WISALTS : community science in action
Published 2002
‘Salinity’ is an emotive term which has come to represent in many people’s minds the damage that farmers have done to the bush as a result of their clearing and agricultural activities. In reality, this is not such a straightforward explanation. Although it is true, farmers did clear the land, which eventually caused salt scalds to form and land to die, the state government and its agencies must also be considered a major proponent in the equation. Government policies with regard to clearing requirements and creating farms in fragile environments, and their subsequent inability to find ‘the’ solution is a matter of record. This book examines the way Harry Whittington found a solution to his own land degradation problems at Springhill, Brookton in Western Australia and and the formation of WISALTS (Whittington Interceptor Sustainable Agriculture Land Treatment Society) who promote his technology – Whittington Interceptor Banks. The banks are designed to capture rainwater where it falls by controlling surface and sub-surface throughflows, so that moisture can be utilised throughout the soil profile, thus preventing waterlogging and dead soil in valley floors. Whittington was a true community scientist in that he researched all available literature to find solutions and then carried out major experimentation to prove the veracity of his ideas. Once satisfied, he promoted his solution and the cause of sustainable agriculture, soil and water conservation to whoever would listen to him - and many did. This book is a history of their work.