Drought and water in the Murray–Darling Basin: From disaster policy to adaptation

Linda C. Botterill, Stephen Dovers

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    2 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    In 1989, Australian government policy ceased to consider drought as a natural disaster but rather viewed it as a problem of risk management in a highly variable climate. This fundamental shift was a long time in the making and has not been without implementation difficulties; however, the experience contains lessons for climate change adaptation for communities and policymakers. Adaptation and disasters are about coping with greater frequency and/or intensity of climate-related events – storms, flooding, heat waves, cyclones and so on. If these events become more norm than exception, then a similar policy shift from disaster preparation and relief to risk management can be expected. The shift is consistent with evolution of emergency and disaster theory and practice, from natural disasters and ‘acts of God’ to risk management to deal with the intersection of environmental variation and human vulnerability across hazard types (Handmer and Dovers, 2013). Like other insights from cognate policy and research domains, this shift has yet to be comprehended in much adaptation literature (Dovers and Hezri, 2010). We summarise the history of drought policy in Australia and the political, cultural and other issues embedded in the process of policy change. We then comment on the intersection of drought policy with the closely related issue of water allocation in the Murray-Darling Basin under conditions of scarcity and climate variability.

    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationNatural Disasters and Adaptation to Climate Change
    PublisherCambridge University Press
    Pages67-74
    Number of pages8
    Volume9781107010161
    ISBN (Electronic)9780511845710
    ISBN (Print)9781107010161
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2013

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