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McAllister, Ryan R. J.; Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation; ryan.mcallister@csiro.au; Robinson, Catherine J; Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation; catherine.robinson@csiro.au; Maclean, Kirsten; Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation; Kirsten.Maclean@csiro.au; Guerrero, Angela M; Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation; ARC Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, The University of Queensland; a.guerrero@uq.edu.au; Collins, Kerry; Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation; kerry.collins@csiro.au; Taylor, Bruce M; Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation; bruce.taylor@csiro.au; De Barro, Paul J; Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation; paul.debarro@csiro.au. |
One of the key determinants of success in managing natural resources is “institutional fit,” i.e., how well the suite of required actions collectively match the scale of the environmental problem. The effective management of pest and pathogen threats to plants is a natural resource problem of particular economic, social, and environmental importance. Responses to incursions are managed by a network of decision makers and managers acting at different spatial and temporal scales. We applied novel network theoretical methods to assess the propensity of growers, local industry, local state government, and state and national government head offices to foster either within- or across-scale coordination during the successful 2001 Australian... |
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports |
Palavras-chave: Banana; Cross scale; Emergency Plant Pest Response Deed; EPPRD; Exponential random graph model; False Panama. |
Ano: 2015 |
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