培养隐形人:帕凯和实践在海岸护理中的作用

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Ethnobiology Letters Pub Date : 2023-05-31 DOI:10.14237/ebl.14.2.2023.1825
Gina McGuire, Alexander Mawyer
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引用次数: 1

摘要

这篇文章以pa'akai(seasalt)实践为中心,为夏威夷岛普纳海岸线乡村的民族生态学提供了一个关键的视角。基于民族志与夏威夷原住民传统的接触,将夏威夷岛普纳的祖先、长者的故事与当代实践交织在一起,我们探索了帕艾采集、海藻供应、,以及近海泉水收集,我们称之为海岸护理——社区和海岸之间的互惠护理关系。夏威夷围绕帕艾凯的文化实践是生物文化联系的一个引人注目的家园,包括从业者对人类和其他人类福祉的理解,这些理解体现了沿海地区明显存在的文化维度的多样性。这项工作强调了文化在沿海地区和社区的可持续管理和福祉中发挥的多种作用,有助于围绕人类层面在沿海保护和管理中的作用进行持续的讨论。在这里,我们使用水、帕凯和利木来展示我们所说的当代保护中的“看不见的领域”——保护政策、规划和制定中围绕土著和当地文化的持续盲点。鼓励保护和岛屿可持续性科学家和从业者更好地参与他们的盲点,我们确定了合作海岸管理的必要性,包括对夏威夷和大洋洲其他土著环境下的海岸研究的影响。
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Cultivating the Unseen: Paʻakai and the Role of Practice in Coastal Care
This piece centers itself in paʻakai (seasalt) practices as providing a critical lens for an ethnoecology of the rural Puna coastline on the island of Hawaiʻi. Grounded by ethnographic engagement with ʻŌiwi (Native Hawaiian) tradition, interweaving moʻolelo (stories) from kūpuna (ancestors, elders) alongside contemporary praxis in Puna, Hawaiʻi Island, we explore the role of paʻakai gathering, limu (seaweed) provisioning, and offshore spring water collection in what we are calling coastal care—the reciprocal relationship of care between communities and coasts. Hawaiian cultural practices around paʻakai are a striking home for biocultural linkages including practitioners’ understandings of human and other-than-human wellbeing that exemplify the diversity of cultural dimensions tangibly present in coastal places. Highlighting the plurality of roles culture plays in the sustainable stewardship and wellbeing of coastal places and communities, this work contributes to ongoing discourses around the role of human dimensions in coastal conservation and management. Here we use water, pa‘akai, and limu to make visible what we call the “unseen realm” within contemporary conservation—the persistent blind spots around Indigenous and local culture(s) within conservation policy, planning, and enactment. Encouraging conservation and island sustainability scientists and practitioners to better engage with their blind spots, we identify the need for collaborative coastal management inclusive of ʻŌiwi practices and understandings of coastal care with implications for coastal studies in Hawai‘i and in other Indigenous contexts across Oceania.
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来源期刊
Ethnobiology Letters
Ethnobiology Letters ANTHROPOLOGY-
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审稿时长
16 weeks
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