The Track is a controversial road located in the Daintree region in the tropical north east of Australia — a region famed for its remnant tropical rainforests and unique convergence of mountainous rainforest with inshore coral reefs. The issue is historically marked by a lack of public participation and a particularly bitter history of contestation between political interests. Constructed amid public controversy and protests during the mid 1980s, it remains a largely unsurfaced road, 30 kilometres in length. Its crudeness reflects its mode of construction: a single bulldozer negotiating difficult terrain and protesters — sometimes buried up to their necks. It is plagued by a combination of problems: an unstable surface in a region where Deliberation and the Public Sphere Simon Niemeyer annual rainfall is measured in metres, steep slopes and river crossings. And it remains a thorny issue, implacably stuck in an unsustainable status quo. |