Vincent van Uitregt, Isabella Sullivan, K. Watene, P. Wehi
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
ABSTRACT As the world seeks to engage with Indigenous values to respond to environmental issues, Indigenous peoples seek to meet that need through genuinely equitable partnerships. In Aotearoa New Zealand, preliminary work towards Māori participation in its Antarctic and Southern Ocean activities has begun. We further that work here by analysing two successful international approaches to negotiating Indigenous participation in environmental research, policy, and governance. In doing so, this paper examines how Māori and other Indigenous peoples might continue to work towards equitable participation in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean. Given the complex nature of the Antarctic region, our analysis focusses on case studies in similarly complex multijurisdictional areas, in the Arctic, and across the Murray Darling Basin in Australia. Working towards equitable participation in each of these cases has been supported by the collectivisation of Indigenous voices, use and establishment of strong Indigenous organisational structures, consistent influence on environmental law and policy, articulation of Indigenous policy, and alignment of Indigenous knowledges and worldviews with the environmental objectives of the regions. These lessons provide high-level principles to support Māori and other Indigenous peoples as they seek to bring new paradigms and values to support improved management of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean.
Polar JournalArts and Humanities-Arts and Humanities (all)
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
期刊介绍:
Antarctica and the Arctic are of crucial importance to global security. Their governance and the patterns of human interactions there are increasingly contentious; mining, tourism, bioprospecting, and fishing are but a few of the many issues of contention, while environmental concerns such as melting ice sheets have a global impact. The Polar Journal is a forum for the scholarly discussion of polar issues from a social science and humanities perspective and brings together the considerable number of specialists and policy makers working on these crucial regions across multiple disciplines. The journal welcomes papers on polar affairs from all fields of the social sciences and the humanities and is especially interested in publishing policy-relevant research. Each issue of the journal either features articles from different disciplines on polar affairs or is a topical theme from a range of scholarly approaches. Topics include: • Polar governance and policy • Polar history, heritage, and culture • Polar economics • Polar politics • Music, art, and literature of the polar regions • Polar tourism • Polar geography and geopolitics • Polar psychology • Polar archaeology Manuscript types accepted: • Regular articles • Research reports • Opinion pieces • Book Reviews • Conference Reports.