2016
DOI: 10.1080/08941920.2016.1196406
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Pāwehe Ke Kai a‘o Hā‘ena:Creating State Law based on Customary Indigenous Norms of Coastal Management

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Cited by 34 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…; Vaughan et al. ). Rahui is the traditional conservation method of Eastern Polynesia in which a community can chose to restrict the use of an area or resource that is in decline and provides a socially robust method of management.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…; Vaughan et al. ). Rahui is the traditional conservation method of Eastern Polynesia in which a community can chose to restrict the use of an area or resource that is in decline and provides a socially robust method of management.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Given the urgent need for management and the failure of many top-down management regimes in Oceania (Johannes 1978(Johannes , 1998Friedlander 2018), we recommend a community-based management approach to implementing these conservation actions based on local participation in the monitoring of the resource (Mcclanahan et al 1997;Wilson et al 2006;Danielsen et al 2007;Jokiel et al 2011;Ayers and Kittinger 2014;Schemmel et al 2016;Vaughan et al 2017). Rahui is the traditional conservation method of Eastern Polynesia in which a community can chose to restrict the use of an area or resource that is in decline and provides a socially robust method of management.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Drawing from traditional knowledge to support community-based marine resource management provides a promising path to respond to these issues and can facilitate the creation of collaborative, innovative approaches to conserve marine resources [46]. Recently, managers and practitioners in communities across Hawai a i have begun to explore formal co-management agreements, in particular those grounded in place-based cultural norms, values, and practices, between community groups and resource managers, like the State of Hawai a i [61][62][63]. These efforts are oriented around uplifting both people and place towards a vision of aā ina momona.…”
Section: Addressing Complex Resource Management In Hawai a Imentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Customarily, local-level resource management in Hawai'i supported thriving social and ecological communities (Ayers and Kittinger 2014;Friedlander et al 2013;Tanaka 2008;Vaughan and Vitousek 2013;Vaughan et al 2016). Th e term 'āina momona (literally: fat lands; fi guratively: abundant and thriving sources of sustenance that support reciprocal relationships between people and place) is used to describe healthy and productive ecological, social, and cultural communities.…”
Section: Th E Cultural Basis Of Well-being In Peruvian Amazon Communimentioning
confidence: 99%