Iucn Members in Oceania

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Iucn Members in Oceania IUCN MEMBERS IN OCEANIA STATE MEMBERS Australia New Zealand GOVERNMENT AGENCY MEMBERS Department of Conservation, New Zealand Department for Environment and Heritage, SA Department of Conservation and Land Management, WA Department of Primary Industries, NSW Department of Sustainability and Environment, Victoria Dept. of Environment and Water Resources, Australia Department of Environment and Conservation, NSW Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, Australia New Zealand Conservation Authority, Australia Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service Wet Tropics Management Authority, Australia NON-GOVERNMENT MEMBERS AND AFFILIATES Association pour la Sauvegarde de la Nature Néo-Calédonienne Addressing threats to coastal livelihoods through better conservation Australian Centre for Environmental Law practices is one of the priorities of the Oceania Regional Programme Australian Conservation Foundation (2) The Pacific 2020 Ocean Challenge - mobilising global Australian Marine Conservation Society action to conserve the world’s largest natural resource, the Pacific Australian Rainforest Conservation Society Ocean. Conservation Volunteers Australia The Pacific Ocean Challenge 2020 seeks to focus global attention, Environment and Conservation Organizations, NZ build new partnerships, and generate the necessary commitments, Environment Institute of Australia and New Zealand to address threats to the world’s largest natural resource – the Institute of Foresters of Australia Pacific Ocean – by 2020. Lincoln University, Environmental Management Division (3) Climate Change Adaptation and the Pacific Mangrove Macquarie University Centre for Environmental Law Initiative – managing coastal ecosystems for sustainable National Environmental Law Association livelihoods and resilience to disasters and climate change. National Trust of Fiji Islands The Pacific Mangrove Initiative will promote sustainable National Parks Association, New South Wales management of mangroves and coastal ecosystems, and raise National Parks Association, Queensland awareness of the value of coastal ecosystem goods and services, National Parks Australia Council including enhanced resilience to climate change and natural Nature Conservation Council, NSW disasters (including tsunami and cyclones). This initiative will work New Zealand Ecological Society with existing initiatives, such as WANI and the Coral Reef Initiative for the South Pacific (CRISP), to promote a ‘ridge to reef’ approach Parks and Wildlife Commission, Northern Territory to catchment management. Project Jonah, Australia Queensland Conservation Council Royal Forest and Bird Protection Society, NZ The Environment Centre, Northern Territory The Wilderness Society, Australia University of Canberra, School of Environmental Sciences University of the South Pacific World Wide Fund for Nature, Australia World Wide Fund for Nature, New Zealand www.iucn.org www.iucn.org/oceania [email protected] IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) is the world’s oldest and largest global environmental network. IUCN is a democratic membership union with more than 1,000 government and NGO member organisations and some 10,000 volunteer scientists in more than 160 countries. IUCN’s work is supported by 1,100 professional staff in 62 Providing Strategic Input Energy: IUCN’s regional energy project, the Energy, offices and hundreds of partners in public, NGO and private Ecosystems and Sustainable Livelihoods Initiative (EESLI), is sectors around the world. IUCN’s headquarters are located The goal of IUCN is to provide scientific advice and support supporting Pacific countries in developing and implementing in Gland, near Geneva, in Switzerland. to efforts in conservation and development of sustainable environmentally sustainable energy policies. The project is livelihoods. Often this means supplementing ongoing efforts also helping to establish a number of renewable energy pilot IUCN in the Pacific and/or providing input to development of policy at national projects focusing on ecosystem conservation and livelihood and international level. The emphasis is on strategic planning enhancement. IUCN’s Oceania region incorporates Australia, New Zealand and implementation of conservation and sustainable livelihood and the Pacific islands region. The Pacific islands comprise initiatives. IUCN recognises that in the Pacific islands there are Innovative Initiatives thousands of islands totalling approximately 550,000 sq km many ongoing initiatives through the work of governments, of land, roughly the size of France, in a vast 30 million sq km inter-governmental organisations and national, regional and In addition to its priority areas, IUCN is developing three of the Pacific Ocean. Over-harvesting of natural resources, international NGOs. National and regional priorities have also cross-cutting initiatives that will initiate new partnerships rapid population growth, invasive species and climate change been identified through various strategic documents, including and help address important implementation gaps in current are posing huge environmental challenges to Pacific island the Pacific Plan; the Action Strategy for Nature Conservation conservation work. The initiatives are: countries, hampered by lack of funding and resources, gaps in in the Pacific Islands; the Pacific Islands Framework for Action (1) The Pacific Centre for Environmental Governance – legislation and limited access to knowledge and information. on Climate Change; the Pacific Islands Regional Ocean promoting and supporting effective environmental governance Policy; the Invasive Species Strategy for the Pacific; and the IUCN has been active in the Oceania region for many years, through technical assistance and capacity building. Pacific Action Plan on Sustainable Water Management. The through the work of the volunteers from its six scientific strategic priorities of the IUCN programme in Oceania have Commissions in the Pacific islands, Australia and New The IUCN Pacific Centre for Environmental Governance will been developed to reflect and best serve these priorities. Zealand. play a leading role in promoting and supporting effective environmental governance in the Pacific islands. The Centre IUCN’s Programme of Work in the Pacific With the establishment of its regional programme office in will provide cost effective access to expertise in environmental Suva, IUCN has become better placed to work more closely IUCN has identified four key areas for its work in the region. governance and play a leadership role in the development with Pacific island nations and ensure targeted actions in line These complement IUCN’s Global Programme 2009 – 2012 and delivery of environmental governance programmes in the with national and regional priorities. IUCN’s vast network of and are aligned with regional priorities and initiatives. region. governments, non-government organisations, scientists and other experts provides Pacific islands with opportunities to Building resilience and adapting to climate change; improving identify and establish new partnerships and collaborative livelihoods; and addressing economic and development relationships to better manage the region’s natural resources policies will be key principles applied in all of these areas. and secure more sustainable livelihoods for its people. Species: IUCN is developing a regional partnership of key Membership biodiversity-focused organisations to develop a regional Red List for Oceania and to support Pacific island countries and IUCN currently has 41 members in the Oceania region. Most territories in using this information effectively. members are based in Australia and New Zealand which are also State members. IUCN is actively recruiting state and Marine: IUCN is providing technical and policy support in the NGO members in the Pacific Islands region. sustainable management of coastal and oceanic resources. Water: The IUCN Regional Office for Oceania is working with the global IUCN Water Programme to implement the second phase of the IUCN Water and Nature Initiative (WANI) in the Pacific islands region. .
Recommended publications
  • Regional Internal Migration Estimates, Provisional, March 2021
    3 August 2021 Regional Internal Migration Estimates, provisional, March 2021 In the year to March 2021 there was a recovery in the number of interstate moves, with 371,000 people moving interstate compared with 354,000 moves in the year to December 2020. This recovery was driven by the highest number of interstate moves for a March quarter since 1996, with around 104,000 people moving. Close to a quarter of the increase in interstate moves was driven by increased departures from Victoria, as Melbourne exited its second lockdown in November 2020. This was due to an outflow of 28,500 people from Melbourne to the eastern states, with the majority of people leaving Melbourne settling in regional Victoria. Net internal migration for regions outside the capital cities continued to increase, with net migration of 44,700 people in the year to March 2021. The number of capital city residents moving to the regions is now higher than it was prior to the onset of the pandemic (244,000 departures compared with 230,000 in March 2020). The recovery in the number of people moving interstate has affected states and territories differently, with smaller states seeing fewer departures, reversing recent historical trends. Net interstate migration has slowed due to COVID, but started to recover in March 2021 Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic net interstate migration has fallen from a high of 404,000 in June 2019, to a low of 354,000 people in December 2020. Interstate migration has started to recover with 371,000 people moving interstate over the year to March 2021.
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  • Returning to the Returning to the Northern Territory
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  • Australia's Northern Territory: the First Jurisdiction to Legislate Voluntary Euthanasia, and the First to Repeal It
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  • European Discovery and South Australian Administration of the Northern Territory
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  • Population Growth with Future Declines in Indigenous Fertility and Mortality, Suggest Aging of the NT Population Will Continue Strongly in the Coming Decades
    Please find attached: 1 Executive summary 2. Current Indigenous housing needs – discussion points 3. The Territory’s Problem of Access to Service Delivery 4. Northern Territory Population Policy Copies of powerpoint slides Northern Territory Population (Tony Barnes – NT Treasury) Mortality in the Northern Territory (Part 1: All Cause Mortality) The NT Labour Market – Impacts of an ageing Australian workforce Education in the Northern Territory Integrated approaches in Indigenous communities COAG meeting 25 June NT Revenue Unfunded superannuation Attachments (available on request) Northern Territory Position Paper – Indigenous Housing 2004/05 and beyond A Report to Thamarrurr Regional Council December 2003 — Baseline Profiles for Social and Economic Development Planning in the Thamarrurr Region Department of Employment, Education and Training — Impacts of an ageing Australian workforce The Northern Territory Economy – Economic Performance Spreadsheets in xls form showing ABS Census Data on Indigenous communities in the NT at a disaggragated level. Productivity Commission Inquiry into the Fiscal and Economic Effects of Ageing Northern Territory Government Agencies’ submissions Executive Summary All the submissions to the PC concentrated upon the uniqueness of the Northern Territory. This had, and will have into the future, a number of impacts that belie the effect of a seemingly low proportion of aged persons in the Territory population. Treasury: Northern Territory Demography Presented the following unique features of the NT population: - • The NT population has a very different age distribution to the Australian population (see graph below), with more children, young adults and fewer old people. However, the NT’s population has been aging just as fast as the national population in terms of average age.
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  • Section 15 References
    Section 15 References Trans Territory Pipeline Project Draft EIS Chapter 15 References 15. References ACIL Tasman, (2004). Economic Impact Assessment of the Trans Territory Pipeline. Prepared for Alcan Engineering Pty Ltd, March 2004. AGO Australian Greenhouse Office, (2002). Australian Methodology for the Estimation of Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks 2002. In: Energy (Fugitive Fuel Emissions). Australian Greenhouse Office, May 2004. AGO Australian Greenhouse Office, (2004a). Australian Greenhouse Office Factors and Methods Workbook, Version 4. Government of Australia, Canberra, August 2004. AGO Australian Greenhouse Office, (2004b). National Greenhouse Gas Inventory 2002. Australian Greenhouse Office, Canberra. April 2004. Available online from: http://www.greenhouse.gov.au/inventory/2002/pubs/inventory2002parta.pdf. AGSNT Australia Geological Survey Organisation Northern Territory, (1972). Ferguson River 1:250,000 Scale Geological Map 1972. Sheet SD 21-12 Second edition. AGSNT Australia Geological Survey Organisation Northern Territory, (1971). Katherine 1:250,000 Scale Geological Map 1994. Sheet SD 53-9. AGSNT Australia Geological Survey Organisation Northern Territory, (1964). Urapunga 1:250,000 Scale Geological Map 1964. Sheet SD 53-10. AGSNT Australia Geological Survey Organisation Northern Territory, (1999). Mount Marumba 1:250,000 ScaleGeological Map 1999. Sheet SD 53-6. AGSNT Australia Geological Survey Organisation Northern Territory, (1998). Blue Mud Bay 1:250,000 Scale Geological Map 1998. Sheet SD 53-7. AGSNT Australia Geological Survey Organisation Northern Territory, (1998). Arnhem Bay Gove 1:250,000 Scale Geological Map 1998. Sheet SD 53-3,4. AGSNT Australia Geological Survey Organisation Northern Territory, (1971). Port Keats 1:250,000 Scale Geological Map 1971. Alcan Gove, (2004a). EHS Policy. Available online from: http://www.alcangove.com.au/home/content.asp?PageID=310 [Accessed 30 Sept 2004].
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  • Australian States and Territories Suicide Data 2019 (ABS, 2020)
    Australian states and territories suicide data 2019 (ABS, 2020) Released, 23 October 2020 Notes about this summary: Victorian data ─ Care needs to be taken when interpreting data derived from Victorian coroner-referred deaths including suicide (Victorian and national mortality datasets). ─ In the first quarter of 2020, the ABS and the Victorian Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages (RBDM) undertook a joint investigation aimed at identifying death registrations that had not been submitted to the ABS as part of usual processing procedures. ─ This investigation identified 2,812 deaths that had been registered in 2017, 2018 and 2019, but had not previously been provided to the ABS. These deaths were not reported because of an issue associated with the Registry's previous processing system which was replaced in early 2019. ─ The ABS has made a permanent time series adjustment to statistics for suicide deaths. The additional death registrations for 2017 and 2018 have been placed back in their respective registration years. ─ This time series change is associated with an administrative processing issue rather than a true change in the prevalence of suicide deaths. Australian Capital Territory suicide data 2019 (ABS, 2020) Number of deaths ACT, 53 NT, 50 TAS, 108 Australian Capital Territory in 2019 ‒ 53 people died by suicide in the Australian SA, 251 Capital Territory (41 male, 12 female), which is an increase on the 47 recorded in 2018. NSW, 937 ‒ The Australian Capital Territory was the WA, 418 second lowest state/territory after the Northern Territory. ‒ The number of suicide deaths was highest in New South Wales (937), followed by VIC, 717 QLD, 784 Queensland (784), and Victoria (717).
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  • SLENDER-BILLED THORNBILL (Western Subspecies) Acanthiza Iredalei Iradalei
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  • Rethinking the Future of Northern Australia's Regions
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  • History and Heritage
    History and Heritage The Territory’s history The legendary journeys of John The Territory has played a significant McDouall Stuart, one of Australia’s role in the ongoing journey of of ancient and enduring most intrepid explorers, led the first reconciliation with Aboriginal peoples Aboriginal culture, successful expedition to traverse in Australia. The `Wave Hill walk-off’, intrepid explorers, the Australian mainland from south where Gurindji Aboriginal stockmen to north. This journey saw the demanded fair wages for their work courageous pioneering epic construction of the Overland is one of the most symbolic historical women and men, and Telegraph Line in the 1870s, described events for Aboriginal peoples, which wartime battles is as ’Australia’s greatest engineering led to the birth of Aboriginal land feat of the nineteenth century’ rights. unlike any other across and the first direct communication Australia. From the Top between Australia and Britain. The For military heritage, the Top End is End to the Red Centre stories of pastoralists and the Gold unparalleled being Australia’s only Rush days of Pine Creek attest to the location of major battle during World the stories of the people fact that the Territory has narrative War II. Darwin felt the full force of who have shaped the that embodies the pioneering the war with air raids by aircraft of Territory underpin our spirit. From driving routes, heritage the Imperial Japanese Navy in 1942, sites and museums, there are many wreaking destruction on the city. distinctive sense of place opportunities to relive the footsteps and unique identity. of the early explorers and pioneers.
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  • 19. Liberty Square
    19. Liberty Square Liberty Square was named by the Darwin Town Council in June 1919 to commemorate the ‘Darwin Rebellion’ of 17 December 1918. That rebellion, which culminated in a protest directed at Government House by hundreds of workers on this site, and the unrest leading to it, resulted in a 1919 Royal Commission into the Administration of the Northern Territory conducted by Justice Norman Kirkwood Ewing (1870-1928). On the western side of Liberty Square is a memorial cairn at the place where the sub-sea cable from Banjowangie (Banyuwangi) Indonesia was joined with the Overland Telegraph Line to revolutionise communications in Australia on 20 November 1871. Towards the eastern side is a plinth and plaque commemorating the scientific achievement of Pietro ‘Commendatore’ Baracchi who, in collaboration with colleagues in Singapore and Banjowangie, established true longitude of Port Darwin and other Australian colonial and New Zealand capital cities in 1883 in the grounds of the Port Darwin Post Office and Telegraphic Station (now Parliament House). On the eastern side near the Supreme Court is a Banyan tree, which is valued by the community as a remnant of the original Darwin foreshore vegetation. It is over 200 years old and was the congregation point for Larrakia youths prior to ceremonies that took place under the nearby Tamarind tree. Liberty Square was the site for the original Darwin Cenotaph, which is now located on the old Darwin Oval on the Esplanade. History Sub-sea Telegraph Cables From the 1850s telegraph technology was very quickly taken up by the Australian colonies, building networks across their own territories, and then soon connecting to each other.
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