Cross-cultural management of freshwater on resource-constrained islands

Start date
End date
Research partner(s)
Flinders University

This project aims to develop a methodology for community-led adaptive water management on resource-constrained islands and will involve Indigenous communities in the development of predictive groundwater models. The project plans to apply three-dimensional participatory mapping, a stakeholder engagement process led and owned by the local communities, on Milingimbi Island in the Northern Territory. The extension of the participatory mapping with a subsurface component will then support the conceptualisation and development of a numerical model of the island's groundwater system. The predictive model and community engagement processes are expected to provide a more robust methodology for evaluating future water management plans. The project outcomes will contribute to solving water supply problems in remote communities in Australia, and overseas.

Output(s)

A transdisciplinary engagement with Australian Aboriginal water and the hydrology of a small bedrock island
Type
Journal article
Authors
Hayashi, Y., Christie, M., Gaillard, J.C., Banks, E.W., Batelaan, O. and Ellis, J
Publisher
Hydrological Sciences Journal
Publication date
Rights notice
© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, and is not altered, transformed, or built upon in any way.
Gapu Napurruŋ
Type
Video
Authors
Alfred Walpay, Clive Gaṯaṯawuy, George Milaypuma, Leonard Bawayŋu, Raymond Buḻanbuḻa
Publisher
Northern Institute
Publication date
Not listed.
Rights notice
This video was filmed at the bank of Nilatjirriwa billabong on Milingimbi Island. The owners and custodians of the billabong discuss the collective accountability with which how the (ground)water sources on the island are traditionally cared and celebrated. The implications drawn from this video are crucial in considering Milingimbi cultural governance and local decision making platform.
Cross-cultural management of freshwater on resource-constrained islands
Type
Website
Authors
Northern Institute
Publisher
Northern Institute
Publication date
Rights notice
© Copyright Charles Darwin University 2017