Ko Tāngonge Te Wai: Indigenous and Technical Data Come Together in Restoration Efforts
Autor: | Waikarere Gregory, Helen Moewaka Barnes, Troy Brockbank, Kaio Hooper, Wendy Henwood, Tim McCreanor |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Conservation of Natural Resources
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander International Cooperation Health Toxicology and Mutagenesis 010501 environmental sciences Public administration 01 natural sciences Indigenous Environmental protection Political science Agency (sociology) 050602 political science & public administration Tribe Humans Treaty Traditional knowledge 0105 earth and related environmental sciences Ecology 05 social sciences Forestry Aotearoa 0506 political science Knowledge Animal ecology Treaty of Waitangi New Zealand |
Zdroj: | EcoHealth. 13:623-632 |
ISSN: | 1612-9210 1612-9202 |
Popis: | In Aotearoa New Zealand, Māori aspirations around land and water conflict with settler interests. As indigenous people, Māori struggle to enact agency over resources, despite Treaty (Treaty of Waitangi/Te Tiriti o Waitangi is an 1840 agreement between Maori and the crown) settlement processes returning some lands. Returns are complex since changes wrought by dispossession may be extreme, requiring multiple stakeholder engagements. Tāngonge, a heavily modified wetland, in northern Aotearoa New Zealand has been the subject of iwi (tribe or tribes) claims since the 1890s. Reparation processes have returned significant areas surrounding Tāngonge to key iwi, Te Rarawa and Ngāi Takoto, who formed the Tāngonge Restoration Group to plan management and restoration. The vision of the iwi is to restore Tangonge as a wetland to rekindle usage by manawhenua (people with demonstrated authority and tribal links to the area in question) and local communities. However, perceived Māori privilege, distrust in Māori praxis and fear of alienation of stakeholders mean the situation presents challenges as well as opportunities. Understanding that various parties view knowledge in particular ways, the Restoration Group sought to juxtapose technical data and manawhenua knowledge about Tāngonge. Hydrology findings and local aspirations were aligned to produce ideas for actions that encompassed the broad concerns. This integration of knowledge provides strategic steps for working with administrative authorities who have historical and ongoing interests. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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