Volume 52, Issue 2 pp. 115-122
Paper

Risk and the Arborist in the Remaking of the Australian Urban Forest

AIDAN DAVISON

AIDAN DAVISON

School of Geography and Environmental Studies, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tas., 7001 Australia

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JAMES BARRIE KIRKPATRICK

Corresponding Author

JAMES BARRIE KIRKPATRICK

School of Geography and Environmental Studies, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tas., 7001 Australia

Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 24 February 2014
Citations: 14

Abstract

The emerging profession of arboriculture has influenced Australian urban landscapes over the past decade. Arborists manage the urban forest as a core component of urban sustainability. We analyse qualitative interviews with 53 professionals involved in tree management in six eastern Australian cities to determine the ways in which a concern with risk management has shaped both the urban forest and the professional status and role of arborists. We found tree-related risk has, in part, worked against urban greening by reducing tree size. However, an emerging risk culture has encouraged the development of the profession of arboriculture, which, in turn, has pioneered sophisticated ways, familiar to neither engineers nor ecologists, of ensuring the cohabitation of people and trees.

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