Griffith University

  • Griffith Portal
  • Contact us
  • Current students
    • Ask us (current students)
    • Careers and employment
    • Fees and charges
    • Griffith Portal
    • Learning@Griffith
    • Library
    • New students
    • Programs and courses
    • Student email
    • Timetables
  • Current staff
    • Griffith Portal
    • IT support
    • Learning and teaching
    • Learning@Griffith
    • Library
    • Research
    • Staff resources
    • Staff email
  • Future students
    • Future Students
    • International students
    • Degree finder
    • Scholarships
    • How do I apply
    • Financing your degree
    • Important dates
  • About Griffith
    • About the University
    • Campuses
    • Schools and centres
    • Fast facts
    • Life at Griffith
    • Learning and teaching
    • Employment at Griffith
    • Sustainability
  • Research
    • Griffith research
    • Research centres
    • Research excellence
    • Research expertise
    • Research students
    • Griffith Enterprise
    • Research services
  • Alumni
    • Benefits and services
    • Giving to Griffith
    • Inspiring alumni
    • Online donations
    • Staff Alumni
Home > Environment, Planning and Architecture > Urban Research Program > Research > Every state for themselves? Learning from cross-border regulatory instruments to support and promote climate change adaption in Australia

Every state for themselves? Learning from cross-border regulatory instruments to support and promote climate change adaption in Australia

  • Popular links
      • Learning@Griffith
      • Degree Finder
      • Student Email
      • Timetables
      • IT Helpdesk
      • Ask Us a question
      • Summer semester
      • Admissions
       
      With over 50,000 students, 5 campuses and research that's solving the problems of the world, there's a lot going on at our university. If you can't find the answer you're looking for at these popular links, we can answer your question at Ask us.
 
  • Urban Research Program
  • Research
    • Creating child friendly cities and communities
    • Griffith research in sustainable transport
    • Group on ecological modernisation and sustainability
    • Peri urban research - Griffith
    • South East Queensland Climate Adaptation Research Initiative
  • Staff
  • News and events
  • Publications
  • Partnerships and collaboration
  • Study and employment
  • HDR students
  • Contact us

Title

Every state for themselves? Learning from cross-border regulatory instruments to support and promote climate change adaption in Australia

Funding type

National Climate Change Adaption Research Grants Program (Social, Economic and Institutional Dimensions)

Chief Investigators

Dr Wendy Steele, Dr Leila Eslami-Andargoli,Dr Florence Crick, Dr Silvia Serrao-Neumann, Dr Lila Singh-Peterson, Prof Pat Dale, Prof Darryl Low Choy.

Project members

Anne-Sophie Iotti, Scott Shearer, Ilva Sporne, Peter Tangney.

Partner Organisations

Southern Cross University

Duration

2011 - 2013

Project summary

The impacts of climate change do not adhere to conventional governance boundaries. Floods for example do not stop at the state border, nor are storm surges contained within local government jurisdictions. Whilst this may appear self-evident, this 'inconvenient institutional truth' poses considerable challenges to existing and deeply embedded governance frameworks. Despite growing recognition that implementing effective adaptation initiatives will require transcending artificially imposed bureaucratic and/or administrative boundaries, the cross-boundary implications of climate change adaptation have been largely ignored within the Australian context (partly as a result of the historical context and nature of Australian federalism). There are significant implications for the evolving national role in climate change adaptation, and the relationship to cross-border state issues that this project identifies and highlights. This project focuses on learning from existing cross-border regulatory mechanisms with a view to strengthening and improving cross-border climate change adaptation practices in Australia.

Status

Current

First peoples.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander

  • Feedback
  • Privacy policy
  • Copyright matters
  • CRICOS Provider - 00233E
Gold Coast • Logan • Brisbane | Australia

Explore Griffith

Current students

  • Ask us (current students)
  • Griffith Portal
  • Learning@Griffith
  • New students
  • Programs and courses
  • Student email
  • Library

Current staff

  • Computing
  • Griffith Portal
  • IT support
  • Learning and teaching
  • Library
  • New staff
  • Staff email

Future students

  • Future students
  • International students
  • Degree finder
  • Scholarships
  • How do I apply
  • Financing your degree
  • Important dates

About Griffith

  • About the University
  • Campuses
  • Schools and centres
  • Fast facts
  • Life at Griffith
  • Learning and teaching
  • Employment at Griffith
  • Sustainability

Research

  • Griffith research
  • Research centres
  • Research excellence
  • Research expertise
  • Research students
  • Griffith Enterprise
  • Research services

Alumni

  • Benefits and services
  • Giving to Griffith
  • Inspiring alumni
  • Staff Alumni

Study areas

  • Business and commerce
  • Criminology and law
  • Education
  • Engineering and IT
  • Environment, planning and architecture
  • Health
  • Humanities and languages
  • Music
  • Science and aviation
  • Visual and creative arts

Information for

  • Guidance Officers
  • Higher degree by research
  • Indigenous students
  • International students
  • Media
  • Non-school leavers
  • Parents and guardians
  • Postgraduate students
  • School students
  • TAFE and tertiary pathways
view mode Standard :: Mobile