“…Whiteness shapes the structures of institutions, processes, policy and ecology documents, timeframes and outcomes, discourse, research, and relationships (Al Ariss et al, ; Moreton‐Robinson, ). The translation of policy into practice is muddied by invisible race privileges that place white ways of knowing in the normative centre (Searle & Mulholland, ) and, increasingly, environmental policy is influenced by a monolithic international arena (Keely & Scoones, ). Natural resource management in Western societies is a broad field covering the management of the Earth's resources and is largely controlled by nation‐states, under various legislative and policy arrangements, with a focus on technological sophistication over social and cultural skills (Howitt, ).…”