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Understanding bushfire : trends in deliberate vegetation fires in Australia
Understanding bushfire : trends in deliberate vegetation fires in Australia
Technical and background paper no. 27
Colleen Bryant
ISBN 978 1 921185 62 5
ISSN 1445-7261
Canberra: Australian Institute of Criminology, January 2008
Abstract
Australia is the most fire-prone continent and country on Earth. While fire is
an essential component of many ecosystems, a natural instrument for maintaining
biodiversity and hence a tool that enables many species to survive, not all
fires are natural or beneficial. Humans play a significant role in modifying the
timing, frequency and size of bushfires, in some cases to the detriment of the
environment and to the endangerment of property and human life. While some
human-caused fires are for the purposes of managing the environment, protecting
human life and property, or the result of accidental actions, many fires occur
through negligence, carelessness, mischievousness, or outright maliciousness,
with little regard for either the environment or people who might be adversely
affected. It is this latter group of fires - herein referred to as deliberate
ignitions - that forms the central theme of this report. This report represents
the first concerted effort to document the number, size and distribution of
potentially illegal fires lit in vegetation in Australia. The report is based on
vegetation fire data supplied by a large number of fire agencies across
Australia. It is technical in nature, which reflects the fact that in many
instances the information provided by fire services is, in itself, complex. The
report provides a basis for guiding research and policies adopted by fire
agencies, other researchers and interested individuals. It forms the basis for a
number of smaller publications that summarise the key findings of the
document.