K. B. MCFARLANE

ORCID: 0000-0003-0321-2028
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Scottish History and National Identity
  • Reformation and Early Modern Christianity
  • Medieval Literature and History
  • Water Governance and Infrastructure
  • Fish Ecology and Management Studies
  • Geographies of human-animal interactions
  • Isotope Analysis in Ecology
  • Historical Studies of British Isles
  • Hydrology and Watershed Management Studies
  • Rural development and sustainability
  • American Constitutional Law and Politics
  • Hydrology and Sediment Transport Processes
  • Sustainability and Climate Change Governance
  • Soil erosion and sediment transport
  • Central Asia Education and Culture
  • Environmental and Social Impact Assessments
  • scientometrics and bibliometrics research
  • Cardiac Structural Anomalies and Repair
  • Anarchism and Radical Politics
  • Library Science and Information
  • Polar Research and Ecology
  • Conservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management
  • Historical Geography and Geographical Thought
  • Island Studies and Pacific Affairs
  • Urban Planning and Governance

Cawthron Institute
2021-2025

University of British Columbia
2017-2018

Auckland Council
2014-2015

University of Auckland
2003-2013

Northeast Catholic College
1947-1966

University of Oxford
1953

Small drinking water systems (SDWS) are widely identified as presenting particular challenges for management and governance in industrialised nations because of their small customer base, geographic isolation, limited human financial capacity. Consequently, an increasing number range scholars have examined SDWS over the last 30 years. Much this work has been technocentric nature, focused on technologies operations, with attention to how these managed, governed, situated within broader social...

10.1139/er-2018-0033 article EN Environmental Reviews 2018-10-09

Effective policies promoting diversity in geoscience require understanding of how the values and practices community support inclusion different social groups. As sites knowledge exchange professional development, academic conferences are important culturing institutions that can alleviate or reproduce barriers to geoscience. This study examines at a 2017 conference, joint Canadian Geophysical Union Society Agricultural Forest Meteorology annual meeting, through observation participation,...

10.1139/facets-2017-0111 article EN cc-by FACETS 2018-04-19

If we may believe John Leyland, a tradition widely current throughout England in the 1530's attributed some of costliest building later middle ages to warriors who had returned home laden with spoils France. Everywhere that antiquary travelled, from Ampthill Bedfordshire Hampton Court near Welsh border, Streatlam county Durham Farleigh, Somerset, he was told castles raised stone and brick ‘ ex spoliis nobilium bello Gallico captorurn ’, sometimes whole mansion paid for proceeds single...

10.2307/3678888 article EN Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 1957-01-01

10.1111/j.1468-2281.1945.tb01345.x article EN Historical Research 1945-05-01

10.1093/ehr/lxxviii.cccvii.290 article EN The English Historical Review 1963-01-01

The problem that I am going to discuss this afternoon is one which must surely have exercised the minds of all those who given a moment's thought financing Hundred Years' War. What conclusions been reached it would be hard say. For apart from two or three illuminating though hardly conclusive pages by Mr A. B. Steel, whom my indebtedness should soon obvious, nothing seems printed on subject in recent times. Yet unless we some idea why men lent large sums ready money English kings later...

10.1017/s1474691300001864 article EN Cambridge Historical Journal 1947-01-01

Abstract A holistic view of nature, which situates human relationships and actions within ecosystems, can broaden our understanding environmental problems expand the scope efficacy potential solutions. Social–ecological systems (SES) research attempts to take this broad perspective. However, a core challenge for field is accounting complex nature SES, develop self‐reinforcing feedback loops unpredictable emergent properties. Here, in context freshwater we consider key conceptual frameworks...

10.1002/ecs2.70249 article EN cc-by Ecosphere 2025-04-01

Abstract Lakes are becoming degraded at an accelerating rate owing to human activity, and understanding their past ecology is necessary for lake management rehabilitation. Palaeolimnology provides numerous methods that enable the historical state of lakes be determined. New Zealand ideal setting in which do this as modification landscape occurred later here than most regions world (approx. 1300 CE). Lake Oporoa a shallow highly significant local indigenous Māori community. This study used...

10.1002/aqc.3808 article EN cc-by-nc Aquatic Conservation Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 2022-03-25

‘Edward I’, said Stubbs, ‘had made his parliament the concentration of three estates people; under Edward II, III, and Richard third estate claimed won its place as foremost three.’ While resounding emphasis is Stubbs's own—his common sense was kind called robust—the sentiment expressed then for long afterwards traditional one. It only late years that opinion has swung to opposite pole maintained with an equal want compromise absolute insignificance commons in political struggles later...

10.2307/3678532 article EN Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 1944-12-01

Public consultation has become an increasingly common form of democratic engagement. While critics have challenged the potential for public to democratize policy-making due existing power structures, few studies undertaken a systematic evaluation policy outcomes consultation. This study combines qualitative and quantitative techniques systematically analyze participants' responses proposals, compare those with resulting policies. We utilized this approach examine large-scale process that...

10.1080/19460171.2017.1282377 article EN Critical Policy Studies 2017-03-10

To make coherent and just choices about introduced species management in postcolonial contexts such as Aotearoa, a nuanced understanding of human relationships to is needed. Inspired by relational values thinking, we interviewed 13 knowledge holders explore diverse meanings experiences with trout their management. Trout have impacted ecosystems communities profoundly different ways, ranging from ecological enhancement cultural empowerment for some devastation loss others. Some people...

10.1080/1177083x.2021.2023198 article EN cc-by-nc-nd Kōtuitui New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online 2022-01-16

Abstract The fair and effective governance of freshwater is an increasingly prominent issue in New Zealand. Emerging from a complex cultural, economic biophysical narratives, geographies are multiple, varied acknowledged as worthy interdisciplinary scrutiny. In this commentary, we reflect on series generative spaces that – group postgraduate geographers (plus supporting staff) created to engage with the multiplicity meanings both within beyond academy. Through evolving epistemic‐political...

10.1111/j.1745-7939.2012.01223.x article EN New Zealand Geographer 2012-04-01

10.2307/1384069 article EN Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 1967-01-01

Invasive non-native species (INNS) are key drivers of global biodiversity loss. This is particularly evident in freshwater ecosystems, where the rates both vertebrate loss and biological invasion exceed those marine terrestrial systems. Aotearoa New Zealand (henceforth Aotearoa) like many other island nations, has a troubled history with NNS. However, it also unique, as main islands were last major landmasses on Earth to remain uninhabited by humans. The endemic fauna had evolved isolation...

10.3897/neobiota.94.122939 article EN cc-by NeoBiota 2024-07-26

ENGLAND AND THE HUNDRED YEARS WAR Get access K. B. MCFARLANE Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Past & Present, Volume 22, Issue 1, July 1962, Pages 3–18, https://doi.org/10.1093/past/22.1.3 Published: 01 1962

10.1093/past/22.1.3 article EN Past & Present 1962-01-01

10.1111/j.1468-229x.1965.tb01130.x article EN History 1965-01-01

Strategic spatial planning (SSP) has been hailed as an innovative approach in metropolitan urban practice, and is a dominant rhetoric within the governance literatures. However, implementation of SSP approaches limited by challenges establishment cross-sectoral multi-level arrangements, together with selective community engagement. This article uses case study recent wide-ranging local government reforms Auckland to interrogate design arrangements enable SSP. The analysis reveals that while...

10.1080/08111146.2015.1061988 article EN Urban Policy and Research 2015-10-02
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