15 results on '"Graham, Sonia"'
Search Results
2. Indigenous Peoples provide alternative approaches to managing biological invasions.
- Author
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Reyes-García, Victoria, Arnold, Crystal, and Graham, Sonia
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TRADITIONAL ecological knowledge , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *INTRODUCED species , *VALUES (Ethics) , *LOCAL knowledge - Abstract
Biological invasions are a main threat to biodiversity. Seebens et al. find that Indigenous Peoples' lands host 30% fewer alien species than other lands. This finding calls for additional examination of the drivers of such difference, from Indigenous Peoples' land management practices to the values that guide relations with nature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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3. Opportunities for better use of collective action theory in research and governance for invasive species management.
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Graham, Sonia, Metcalf, Alexander L., Gill, Nicholas, Niemiec, Rebecca, Moreno, Carlo, Bach, Thomas, Ikutegbe, Victoria, Hallstrom, Lars, Ma, Zhao, and Lubeck, Alice
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SPECIES , *BIOTIC communities , *BIODIVERSITY , *INTRODUCED species , *WILDLIFE conservation - Abstract
Controlling invasive species presents a public‐good dilemma. Although environmental, social, and economic benefits of control accrue to society, costs are borne by only a few individuals and organizations. For decades, policy makers have used incentives and sanctions to encourage or coerce individual actors to contribute to the public good, with limited success. Diverse, subnational efforts to collectively manage invasive plants, insects, and animals provide effective alternatives to traditional command‐and‐control approaches. Despite this work, there has been little systematic evaluation of collective efforts to determine whether there are consistent principles underpinning success. We reviewed 32 studies to identify the extent to which collective‐action theories from related agricultural and environmental fields explain collaborative invasive species management approaches; describe and differentiate emergent invasive species collective‐action efforts; and provide guidance on how to enable more collaborative approaches to invasive species management. We identified 4 types of collective action aimed at invasive species—externally led, community led, comanaged, and organizational coalitions—that provide blueprints for future invasive species management. Existing collective‐action theories could explain the importance attributed to developing shared knowledge of the social‐ecological system and the need for social capital. Yet, collection action on invasive species requires different types of monitoring, sanctions, and boundary definitions. We argue that future government policies can benefit from establishing flexible boundaries that encourage social learning and enable colocated individuals and organizations to identify common goals, pool resources, and coordinate efforts. Article impact statement: Invasive species control requires collective actions that prioritize flexible boundaries and social learning over monitoring and sanctions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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4. Local values and fairness in climate change adaptation: Insights from marginal rural Australian communities.
- Author
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Graham, Sonia, Barnett, Jon, Mortreux, Colette, Hurlimann, Anna, and Fincher, Ruth
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FAIRNESS , *CLIMATE change , *ABSOLUTE sea level change , *COASTS , *HOMEOWNERS , *RELOCATION - Abstract
A key criterion of successful adaptation to climate change is that it avoids potential inequalities arising from climate impacts or from adaptation strategies themselves. Recent research on adaptation in developing and developed countries argues that the measures of such fairness cannot be captured by standard metrics of vulnerability and should be situated in the milieu of people’s daily lives and temporalities. Yet there is little empirical evidence to support this theoretical argument. This paper describes a method, and presents findings from research that aimed to understand and classify the lived values of four marginal rural communities at risk of sea-level rise in Australia to inform adaptation planning and implementation. Our research finds that there are at least five types of primary residents and second home-owners attached to these four low-lying coastal communities. Some of these residents are more likely to be amenable to relocation if their needs for affordable living and belonging are met. For others, there may be little that can be done to compensate for the loss of place attachment, and implementing a measured approach that provides them time to adapt to the idea of change and form connections to new places is the best that could be achieved. We discuss the implications of place-specific and people-centric values for achieving fair adaptation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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5. Rural Change in Australia: Population, Economy, Environment.
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Graham, Sonia
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NONFICTION - Published
- 2015
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6. Obnoxious Plants and Pestiferous Growths: how figurative language reinforces the management of weeds in Victoria, Australia.
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Height, Kaitlyn, Jefferson, Rachael, and Graham, Sonia
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FIGURES of speech , *WEED control , *PLANT growth , *INVASIVE plants , *INTRODUCED species - Abstract
The militaristic metaphors common in public discourses about invasive species have been criticised for promoting combative management approaches and constraining policy responses. But are they really to blame for entrenching a command-and-control approach to managing weeds in Australia? Since 2000, almost every state and territory has introduced new biosecurity legislation encouraging 'shared responsibility'. Yet, this term remains noticeably absent from new legislation in Victoria. We aim to examine whether public discourses around invasive plants have remained unchanged to better understand how invasive plants have been framed and whether this can provide insight into the lack of engagement with 'shared responsibility' in Victorian legislation. This study investigates figurative language used in Victorian newspapers from 1885 to 2020 to describe three invasive plants and their management: Bathurst burr, blackberry and gorse. The figurative language reveals limited acknowledgement of humans' role in the spread of weeds and emphasis on the diverse impacts of weeds on humans. Militaristic metaphors have existed for over 130 years, but are neither the most predominant nor community-mobilising. Overall, figurative language has focused on individual efforts to control weeds, without critical analysis of the inter-relationships between humans and weeds nor having created opportunities for caring or collaborative weed management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. The Effects of Climate and Socio-Demographics on Direct Household Carbon Dioxide Emissions in Australia.
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GRAHAM, SONIA, SCHANDL, HEINZ, WILLIAMS, LIANA J., and FORAN, TIRA
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DEMOGRAPHIC surveys , *CARBON dioxide , *EMISSIONS (Air pollution) , *CLIMATE change , *TEMPERATURE effect - Abstract
Household CO2 emissions are a significant contributor to global greenhouse gas emissions and consequently climate warming. Despite this, there has been little consideration of how household CO2 emissions may be affected by changes in climate. The aim of the present study has been to investigate the way climate, as well as socio-demographic characteristics, may affect household CO2 emissions produced from energy use. A national online survey was conducted to determine current household CO2 emissions in Australia as well as capture the ownership and use of household appliances and installations. Electricity and gas-based emissions as well as the ownership of a variety of household appliances and installations were found to be strongly associated with temperature. Electricity and gas emissions were found to decrease as annual average temperatures increase. However, as temperatures continue to rise under climate change this pattern may be reversed owing to increased reliance on air conditioners. One option for preventing this from occurring is to encourage houses to adopt more solar-passive installations. Although this may be expensive, households with higher emissions tend to have higher incomes, indicating that they may have the capacity to pay for such installations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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8. Nurturing Relationships: the gardens of Greek and Vietnamese migrants in Marrickville, Sydney.
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Graham, Sonia and Connell, John
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GARDENS , *IMMIGRANTS , *URBAN landscape architecture , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
First- and second-generation migrants represent about 40 per cent of the Australian population. With such a large and also diverse immigrant population, urban landscapes are significantly shaped by the gardens created by migrants. Two groups of Vietnamese and Greek migrants, in the inner suburb of Marrickville South in Sydney, were interviewed to examine the relationship between migration history and garden-making practices. Garden composition was influenced by migrants' relationship with their homeland, in terms of length of time since migration, previous garden ownership, reason for migration and desire for cultural continuity, and by the size of the garden. Gardens also varied according to country of migration. The actual garden produce and type of environment created by the garden helped to emphasise and maintain cultural relationships, provide a space of nostalgia, and give a sense of ownership and control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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9. Can Development Programs Shape Cooperation?: Results from a Framed Field Experiment in Indonesia.
- Author
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Napitupulu, Lucentezza, Bouma, Jetske, Graham, Sonia, and Reyes-García, Victoria
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COMMUNITY involvement , *COOPERATION , *GOVERNMENT policy , *GOVERNMENT programs , *COLLECTIVE action - Abstract
Empirical studies among small-scale societies show that participation in national development programs impact traditional norms of community cooperation. We explore the extent to which varying levels of village and individual involvement in development policies relate to voluntary cooperation within community settings. We used a field experiment conducted in seven villages (208 participants) from an indigenous society in Indonesia known for their strong traditional cooperative norms, the Punan Tubu. We framed the experiment in terms of an ongoing government house-building program. The results indicate that there were synergistic and antagonistic interactions between existing cooperative norms and government development policies. Participants' cooperation in the experimental setting was low, probably because the Punan Tubu are used to cooperating and sharing both under demand and in a context in which uncooperative behavior is largely unpunished. Variation in experimental behavior was related to both village- and individual-level variables, with participants living in resettlement villages and participants living in a house constructed under the government program displaying more cooperative behavior. The cooperation evident in resettled villages may indicate that people in these villages are more comfortable interacting in anonymous settings and less committed to the demand-sharing norms still prevalent in the upstream villages. The more cooperative behavior among villagers who have previously received a house might indicate that they recognize that they are now better off than others and feel more obliged to cooperate. Policies aiming to capitalize on existing cooperative behavior to stimulate community collective action should consider the specific conditions under which cooperation occurs in real settings since traditional norms that regulate cooperative behavior might not translate well to cooperation in government-led programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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10. Scaling up qualitative research to harness the capacity of lay people in invasive plant management.
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Gill, Nicholas, Chisholm, Laurie, Atchison, Jennifer, Graham, Sonia, Hawkes, Gina, Head, Lesley, and McKiernan, Shaun
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INVASIVE plants , *QUALITATIVE research , *INTERNET protocol address , *COMMUNITIES , *LAND tenure - Abstract
Successful management of invasive plants (IPs) requires the active participation of diverse communities across land tenures. This can be challenging because communities do not always share the views of scientists and managers. They may directly disagree, have alternative views, or be unwilling to manage IPs. Reviews of IP social science identify opportunities to better understand the role of cultural processes and everyday practices to address these challenges. To scale up and leverage the insights of existing qualitative social science IP research, we used meta‐ethnography to unlock accounts and interpretations of lay perspectives. Meta‐ethnography is a form of qualitative research synthesis increasingly used beyond its origins in health and education to produce interpretive syntheses of an area of research. In the 7 phases of meta‐ethnography, we systematically identified and synthesized 19 qualitative articles pertinent to lay experience and knowledge of IPs in diverse settings. Action and meaning regarding IPs were influenced by 6 meta‐themes in personal and social life: dissonance, priorities, difference, agency, responsibility, and future orientations. Through descriptions and examples of each meta‐theme, we demonstrated how the meta‐themes are higher level structuring concepts across the qualitative research that we analyzed and we retained grounding in the in‐depth qualitative research. We characterized the meta‐themes as leverage points and tensions by which we reframed lay people in terms of capacity for reflective IP management rather than as obstacles. The meta‐ethnography synthesis shows how leverage points and tensions emerge from everyday life and can frame alternative and meaningful starting points for both research and public engagement and deliberation regarding IP management. These insights are not a panacea, but open up new space for reflective and mutual consideration of how to effectively navigate often complex IP problems and address conservation and social and livelihood issues in dynamic social and physical environments. Aprovechamiento de la Capacidad de la Gente Común en el Manejo de Plantas Invasoras [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. Temporalities in Adaptation to Sea-Level Rise.
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Fincher, Ruth, Barnett, Jon, and Graham, Sonia
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CLIMATE change research , *PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation , *COASTAL ecology , *SEA level & the environment , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy research , *TIME management - Abstract
Local residents, businesspeople, and policymakers engaged in climate change adaptation often think differently of the time available for action. Their understandings of time, and their practices that invoke time, form the complex and sometimes conflicting temporalities of adaptation to environmental change. They link the conditions of the past to those of the present and the future in a variety of ways, and their contemporary practices rest on such linking explicitly or implicitly. Yet the temporal connections between the present and distant future of places are undertheorized and poorly considered in the science and policy of adaptation to environmental change. In this article we address this theoretical and practical challenge by weaving together arguments from social and environmental geography with evidence from small coastal communities in southeastern Australia. We show that the past conditions residents’ imagined futures and that these local, imagined futures are incongruent with scientific, popular, and policy accounts of the future. Thus we argue that the temporalities of adaptation include incommensurate and unacknowledged ways of knowing and that these affect adaptation practices. We propose that strategies devised by governments for adapting to environmental change need to make visible—and calibrate policies with—the diverse temporalities of adaptation. On this basis, the times between the present and the long-term future can be better navigated as a series of short and negotiated policy steps. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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12. Does the End Justify the Means? A Media Analysis of Invasive Pig and Fox Management.
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Thompson, Beatrice Emma, Grace, Melanie Elyse, Foster, Bridget Clare, Harrison, Claire Louise, and Graham, Sonia
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INTRODUCED animals , *ANIMAL rights activists , *SWINE , *ANIMAL welfare , *FOXES , *SOCIAL science research - Abstract
Growing numbers of researchers and animal rights advocates are concerned about the welfare of invasive nonhuman animals, and new government policies echo these concerns. Past survey research, however, shows that the general public defines invasive animal welfare differently than scientists and animal rights advocates. There is little social research that investigates how differing views on the acceptability of invasive animal controls are reconciled in public fora. This article examines how invasive animal control is represented in two newspapers— The Sydney Morning Herald and The Land —in New South Wales, Australia, focusing on the management of invasive foxes and pigs. The findings revealed that efficacy is emphasized more than humaneness, especially among farmers and peri-urban residents, suggesting a disjuncture between new policies and landholders' values. Views of indigenous land managers and amenity migrants are rarely represented yet they need to be actively engaged to ensure effective policy change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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13. Honey Bee Nest Thermoregulation: Diversity Promotes Stability.
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Jones, Julia C., Myerscough, Mary R., Graham, Sonia, and Oldroyd, Benjamin P.
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BODY temperature regulation , *HONEYBEES , *VERTEBRATES , *BIODIVERSITY , *GENETICS , *QUEEN bee rearing - Abstract
A honey bee colony is characterized by high genetic diversity among its workers, generated by high levels of multiple mating by its queen. Few clear benefits of this genetic diversity are known. Here we show that brood nest temperatures in genetically diverse colonies (i.e., those sired by several males) tend to be more stable than in genetically uniform ones (i.e., those sired by one male). One reason this increased stability arises is because genetically determined diversity in workers' temperature response thresholds modulates the hive-ventilating behavior of individual workers, preventing excessive colony-level responses to temperature fluctuations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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14. Meanings, materials and competences of area-wide weed management in cropping systems.
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Campbell, Rebecca, Height, Kaitlyn, Hawkes, Gina, Graham, Sonia, Schrader, Silja, Blessington, Louise, and McKinnon, Scott
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WEED control , *CROPPING systems , *HERBICIDE resistance , *CROP management , *FARMERS , *PRIVATE property - Abstract
Area-wide collaboration across private and public property boundaries can enhance the management of weeds and minimise the spread of herbicide resistance. Yet we know little about the practices individual land managers engage in to achieve area-wide weed management (AWWM). This paper uses Social Practice Theory (SPT) as a framework to understand how cropping land managers engage with the practices of AWWM, and what the drivers and barriers are to their participation. 30 qualitative interviews were undertaken with land managers in Australian cropping regions of the Darling Downs (Queensland), Gwydir (New South Wales), Riverina (New South Wales) and Sunraysia (Victoria). Thematic analysis of the interviews explored the three dimensions of SPT—meanings, materials, and competences—of AWWM and the interactions between these elements. There is a value-action gap between growers' desire to participate in AWWM practices and their capacity to do so. The analysis reveals that narrowing this gap requires interventions at the points where the SPT elements intersect. It recommends beginning by leveraging existing commonalities between growers who already have a desire to participate in AWWM then scaling out by encouraging trusted agronomist networks to link diverse growers to facilitate collaborative weed management practices. There is also a role for government in supporting the development of leadership capabilities among growers, providing an enabling environment for agronomists to act as systemic facilitators and leading by example on public land. Most of the research on collective management of weeds has focused on formal groups in grazing systems. This study provides new insights into how and why weeds are largely managed independently in cropping systems and proposes ways growers may be supported to adopt more collaborative practices to address this landscape-scale problem. • Most growers believe area-wide weed management (AWWM) would be beneficial. • Few growers participate in AWWM: there is a value-action gap. • Growers are confident they have the competences needed to manage weeds on their own. • Lack of action from neighbouring private and public land managers undermines confidence in AWWM. • Diverse meanings about autonomy and financial imperatives create contradictions that constrain AWWM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. The relevance of a coproductive capacity framework to climate change adaptation: investigating the health and water sectors in Cambodia.
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Bowen, Kathryn J., Miller, Fiona P., Dany, Va, and Graham, Sonia
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DECISION making , *CLIMATE change research , *WATER utilities , *KNOWLEDGE management research , *SCIENCE & state - Abstract
Multiple active partnerships in the health and water sectors in Cambodia exist to address climate change adaptation, operating beyond typical sectoral and organizational divides. Decisions around national adaptation policy are made predominantly by the relevant lead ministry, contrasting with where funding originates from (i.e., major donors, multilaterals, United Nation agencies). Adaptation policy is thus the result of a process of coproduction by state and nonstate actors. The research we present sought to understand the relationships that exist between knowledge- and decision-makers with respect to climate change adaptation in the health and water sectors in Cambodia, and the factors that enabled or constrained these relationships. Forty-four interviews were conducted with representatives of 32 organizations. We found that coproductive relationships were most effective when there were clearly defined roles and responsibilities, coordination of technical and financial resources, and trust. The two key factors of coproductive capacity that enabled and supported these partnerships were scientific resources and governance capability. Ultimately, the roles and responsibilities given to various actors requires commensurate funding and greater consideration of existing relationships and power dynamics. The reliance on international scientific expertise also needs to be challenged so that local research capabilities can be developed and locally relevant, problem-specific information can be provided. The ongoing funding, codevelopment, and sharing of such knowledge would significantly enhance trust and cooperation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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