Item

New Zealand coastal system boundaries, connections and management

Abstract
Understanding coastal boundaries, connections and drivers of landscape change is integral to effective coastal planning and management. This concept is explored here through case studies representing two very different New Zealand systems: embayed sand beaches in eastern and western open-coast settings; and mixed sand and gravel coast river-mouth lagoons. When framed within a resource and environmental management context these studies indicate that national recognition of the dynamic and interactive nature of coastal environments is a relatively new and amorphous phenomenon in New Zealand and, as such, has been ineffective in driving integrated regional management practices and sustainable coastal outcomes.
Type
Journal Article
Type of thesis
Series
Citation
Hart, D. E., & Bryan, K. R. (2008). New Zealand coastal system boundaries, connections and management. New Zealand Geographer, 64(2), 129-143.
Date
2008
Publisher
Blackwell Publishers
Degree
Supervisors
Rights