A culture of burning - social-ecological memory, social learning and adaptation in Australian volunteer fire brigades | Natural Hazards Research Australia

A culture of burning - social-ecological memory, social learning and adaptation in Australian volunteer fire brigades

Journal article

Research theme

Learning from disasters

Publication type

Journal Article

Published date

09/2020

Author Sarah Dickson-Hoyle , Ruth Beilin , Karen Reid
Keywords
Abstract

While Australian government agencies are increasingly emphasizing the need to “build community resilience” to bushfires, communities in many rural landscapes have a strong history of actively managing fire risk, in particular through involvement in volunteer fire brigades. This paper explores social-ecological memory, social learning, and adaptation in volunteer Country Fire Authority brigades in western Victoria, specifically in the context of planned burning of strategic roadside fire breaks. It examines the relationships between local knowledge, narratives and practices of burning and how these shape volunteer identities, embodying “shared responsibility”. Findings show that participation in roadside burning is critical for supporting social learning and ongoing community engagement in fire management. However, changing land uses, social demographics and regulatory processes are negatively impacting local volunteer capacities. While brigades have responded by re-organizing their practices, questions remain as to what extent this constitutes adaptation or transformation connecting to broader landscape-level risk management.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Society and Natural Resources
Date Published
09/2020
URL
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08941920.2020.1819494
DOI
10.1080/08941920.2020.1819494
Locators Google Scholar | DOI

Related projects

Project
Restor(y)ing fire-adapted territories: wildfire recovery, Indigenous leadership and restoration in Secwepemcul'ecw