Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.
The overall objective of this research project was to explore and demonstrate whether the potential of the new technological capabilities of satellites can actually provide a rigorous, legally-reliable, and cost effective tool in inspection and compliance regimes under contemporary environmental legislation. The main aims were:to consider lessons from Australian experiences as to whether new high resolution satellite imagery can now be used as an environmental monitoring and compliance toolto assess the operational effectiveness of existing Australian state satellite monitoring programmes (legal compliance, political, economic, technical and spatial, capabilities of regulators) and any constraints affecting its use as a compliance tool or lessons learnt in the Australian contextto investigate the awareness and attitudes of those regulated this way and evaluate how knowledge of being monitored by satellites is likely to influence compliance behaviour of those subject to regulationto analyse whether satellite monitoring is seen as more or less desirable than conventional forms of inspection, whether it is seen as more confrontational method of regulation, and the impact on relationships and confidence it might have between those subject to regulation, regulatory authorities, policy makers and the communityto derive principles that can inform and advance debate in the UK, EU and amongst a wide international audience as to the merits of using satellites primarily as a compliance tool in the area of environmental legal systems, but also with implications for other legal monitoring as wellSurveys of regulated communities in Australia were conducted to examine reactions to being monitored by satellites. Semi-structured interviews were held with government, farming bodies, judges, lawyers and NGOs. The qualitative data are not available for secondary analysis due to consent issues. Further information and publications are available from the Smart Enforcement in Environmental Legal Systems: A Socio-Legal Analysis of Regulatory Satellite Monitoring in Australia ESRC Award web page.
Main Topics:
During the course of this ESRC project, a survey was undertaken to examine the awareness and perceptions of Australian landholders of satellite monitoring programmes. The survey that was posted out to Australian landholders is contained in the dataset. The results of the survey are contained in this dataset. They are broken down for analysis into the original response data; the results by data charts; the results by data tables; a breakdown of cross tabulated data categorised by each individual Australia State; and frequency data.
Simple random sample
The names and addresses of survey recipients were supplied from a list held by a private Australian company, Baron Strategic Services, who provide consulting market information services about Australian farms. The farming database contains approximately 110,000 farmer names and addresses from across Australia. The survey recipients were randomly selected for each State from this purchased list.
Postal survey
Email Survey