The platform will undergo maintenance on Sep 14 at about 7:45 AM EST and will be unavailable for approximately 2 hours.
2019
DOI: 10.1080/02614367.2019.1640774
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Coastal blue space and wellbeing research: looking beyond western tides

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
33
0

Year Published

2020
2020
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
4
4

Relationship

2
6

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 48 publications
(42 citation statements)
references
References 42 publications
1
33
0
Order By: Relevance
“…The idea of cultural difference and diversity in wellbeing and leisure perspectives is central to the scholarship in this special issue. Wheaton, Waiti, Cosgriff, and Burrows (2019) offer a critical exploration of the extant literature on wellbeing and coastal bluespace, emphasising difference and diversity in experience according to the intersections of space/place, ethnicity, culture and socioeconomic status. Challenging Eurocentric interpretations of wellbeing and bluespace the authors bring a Maori worldview to their discussion and illustrate the significance of their multicultural research team for understanding the complexities of wellbeing and coastal spaces.…”
Section: About This Special Issue On Leisure and Wellbeingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The idea of cultural difference and diversity in wellbeing and leisure perspectives is central to the scholarship in this special issue. Wheaton, Waiti, Cosgriff, and Burrows (2019) offer a critical exploration of the extant literature on wellbeing and coastal bluespace, emphasising difference and diversity in experience according to the intersections of space/place, ethnicity, culture and socioeconomic status. Challenging Eurocentric interpretations of wellbeing and bluespace the authors bring a Maori worldview to their discussion and illustrate the significance of their multicultural research team for understanding the complexities of wellbeing and coastal spaces.…”
Section: About This Special Issue On Leisure and Wellbeingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast to health—often understood as the absence of disease—wellbeing is a broader, more subjective, multidimensional, and holistic notion that encompasses physical, social, environmental, educational, spiritual, affective, and cognitive dimensions of a life (Liamputtong et al, 2012). Although global conceptualisations of wellbeing tend to emphasize it as a “multi-factorial state linked to a nation’s economic, social, cultural and environmental productivity” (Testoni et al, 2018 cited in Wheaton et al, 2019, p. 84), proliferating efforts to measure citizens’ wellbeing have focused on individuals’ subjective sense of feeling “well” or “good.”…”
Section: What Is Wellbeing?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Waka ama paddling is an important part of indigenous Māori culture, and has seen somewhat of a resurgence in popularity, particularly among women. Māori worldviews embrace different practices and assumptions about what water means, that are fundamentally tied to Māori identity, health, and wellbeing (Jackson et al, 2017; Wheaton et al, 2019). Liu outlines that like other people from the Pacific, Māori have strong attachments to oceanic blue spaces from gathering kaimoana [seafood] to waka-based transportation on the ocean (and inland lakes and rivers).…”
Section: Understanding Blue Spaces: Introducing the Articlesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Third, Aotearoa New Zealand’s bi-cultural [ 23 ] context, i.e. Indigenous Māori and European settlers (termed Pākehā), provides a revealing cultural context for reassessing the ways in which ‘Western Science’ conceptualises socio-ecological relationships and coastal ‘blue spaces’ as sites of wellbeing [ 31 ], that often drive understandings of sustainability, wellbeing, and ocean health. More widely, the paper demonstrates the value of trans- and inter-disciplinary place-based approaches that integrates research across the humanities and social sciences—including cultural and health geography, sociologies of leisure and sport, and feminist cultural studies—and also engages with Indigenous knowledge [IK], specifically Mātauranga Māori.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%