TY - JOUR
T1 - Contested forestries, contested educations
T2 - A centenary reflection
AU - Dargavel, John
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - The first 50 years of Australian forestry education was, like the present, a period of conflict and change in forestry, and of fierce contests about how education should be conducted. Colonial practice, British plantation culture, classic European forestry, imperial practice and American pragmatism created different types of forestry, or ‘forestries’. They resulted in contests about how forestry should be organised, who should lead it and how foresters should be educated. The contests were played out in the histories of the Victorian School of Forestry, the Australian Forestry School and the University of Melbourne. They are illustrated in the life of Alfred Oscar Piatt Lawrence (1904–1986), one of the six foresters who graduated from both the Victorian School of Forestry and the Australian Forestry School. He had a distinguished career and became Commissioner in 1949 and Chief Commissioner of the Victorian Forests Commission (1956–1968) during a period of convergence of forestry and forestry education. The single model of forestry ended in the contests of the last quarter of a century. Reflections on the future consider the biodiversity rift, the contrast between ‘the forest of care’ and ‘the wood of neglect’, globalisation and localism, general education and specialisation.
AB - The first 50 years of Australian forestry education was, like the present, a period of conflict and change in forestry, and of fierce contests about how education should be conducted. Colonial practice, British plantation culture, classic European forestry, imperial practice and American pragmatism created different types of forestry, or ‘forestries’. They resulted in contests about how forestry should be organised, who should lead it and how foresters should be educated. The contests were played out in the histories of the Victorian School of Forestry, the Australian Forestry School and the University of Melbourne. They are illustrated in the life of Alfred Oscar Piatt Lawrence (1904–1986), one of the six foresters who graduated from both the Victorian School of Forestry and the Australian Forestry School. He had a distinguished career and became Commissioner in 1949 and Chief Commissioner of the Victorian Forests Commission (1956–1968) during a period of convergence of forestry and forestry education. The single model of forestry ended in the contests of the last quarter of a century. Reflections on the future consider the biodiversity rift, the contrast between ‘the forest of care’ and ‘the wood of neglect’, globalisation and localism, general education and specialisation.
KW - A.J. Ewart
KW - A.O.R Lawrence
KW - A.V. Galbraith
KW - Australia
KW - Australian Forestry School
KW - Australian National University
KW - C.E. Carter
KW - C.E. Lane Poole
KW - E.H.F. Swain
KW - Education
KW - History
KW - Imperial Forestry Institute
KW - J. Ednie Brown
KW - J.H. Chinner
KW - N.W. Jolly
KW - Royal Scottish Arboricultural Society
KW - Russell Grimwade Scholarship
KW - University of Adelaide
KW - University of Melbourne
KW - Victorian School of Forestry
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84859233073&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/00049158.2012.10676381
DO - 10.1080/00049158.2012.10676381
M3 - Article
SN - 0004-9158
VL - 75
SP - 16
EP - 21
JO - Australian Forestry
JF - Australian Forestry
IS - 1
ER -