Fiona McCormack
The University of Waikato, Hamilton, Aotearoa/New Zealand
Keywords: Indigenous peoples, ocean frontiers, marine protected areas, individual transferable quota fisheries, Kermadec Ocean Sanctuary, treaty rights, commoning, exclusive economic zones, Treaty of Waitangi
DOI: 10.5509/202194177
This paper interprets the disrupted establishment of the Kermadec Ocean Sanctuary, a 620,000 square kilometre marine protection area, as a crucial moment in Pacific frontier making. The development of large-scale protected marine areas is a politically charged frontier tool, in which states garner international recognition and environmental renown by setting aside large swathes of their exclusive economic zones. In the Kermadec Sanctuary, this enclosure hit against an assemblage of Indigenous histories, ecologies, repatriated fishing rights, and privatized fishing quota challenging the oft-marginalized agency of Indigenous people in frontier narratives. This paper argues that three factors are fundamental to untangling this conflict: first, the historical trajectory of terraqueous territorialization in the Kermadec region, second, the post-Treaty of Waitangi settlement dynamics of Māori marine environments, and third, the common ecosystem services model underlying conservation and extraction.
克马德克海洋保护区:水陆区域化与毛利海洋环境
关键词: 原住民;海洋边疆;海洋保护区;个体可转让配额渔业;克马德克海洋保护区。
本文将克马德克海洋保护区—一个62万平方公里海洋保护区—的受到干扰的设立过程解读为太平洋边疆建设的一个关键时刻。大规模的海洋保护区的开发是一个政治意味浓厚的边疆工具,国家通过将其专属经济区的大片水域保护起来获取国际承认和环境保护声望。 在克马德克保护区,此次圈地冲击了原住民历史、生态、返还的捕鱼权以及私有化的捕鱼配额诸问题的集合,挑战了原住民在边疆叙事中通常被边缘化的能动性。 本论文提出,三大因素对于理清这个冲突至关重要:首先,克马德克地区水陆区域化的历史轨迹;第二,毛利海洋环境在后条约解决时期的动态;第三,保护和开发所基于的共同的生态系统服务模型。
Translated from English by Li Guo
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