Abstract
Climate and land use change pose global challenges to water policy and management. This article furthers calls for integrated research conceptualizing water management as a holistic, interdependent system that may benefit from sociological research. To better understand how socioenvironmental change affects lifestyle expectations and experiences, interviews with in-migrants (relocated to inland Australia from metropolitan cities), industry and government informants are thematically analyzed. Results show in-migrants engage in adaptive water management and conservation strategies to enhance water security, yet call for council provision of water management education to minimize vulnerability. Industry informants perceive few water supply or pollution issues, favoring technological solutions to support unfettered growth and water amenities, while de-prioritizing environmental sustainability goals. Government priorities reflect drought narratives in Australian water policy reform and show concern about meeting consumer water supply and preserving water quality. With predictions of greater weather severity, including flooding, and in-migrants’ difficulty managing heavy rainfall, national legislation and policy modifications are necessary. Specifically, normalizing climate variability in policy and social identities is desirable. Finally, practices prioritizing water scarcity and trading management over environmental protection indicate a need to surpass environmental commodification by depoliticizing water management.
Highlights
Sustainable development and governance depend on policy informed by social perceptions and norms, in addition to environmental and economic practices
Water management is one area where research and theory show individual consumption practices are influenced by factors beyond information
Metropolitan planners lament, the balance of retaining the amenity versus letting people in is almost unsolvable, and especially if you put a beach in front of an Australian (KI-M-3)
Summary
Sustainable development and governance depend on policy informed by social perceptions and norms, in addition to environmental and economic practices. The federal government’s MDB adaptive management strategies, in seeking to address climate change in response to the hottest and driest years recorded in the research area [6], reflect social priorities. Scientists worldwide document the urgency of policy and adaptive strategies to reverse biodiversity loss and extinction rates This necessitates meeting United Nations Sustainability Goals for water health [43]. Environment, and population conditions affect livability [49,52,53], the article argues water management must be divorced from its commodification
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