2018
DOI: 10.1080/00288330.2018.1523200
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Indigenous and local peoples’ values of estuarine shellfisheries: moving towards holistic-based catchment management

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Cited by 11 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Even articles describing social outcomes of ecological interventions will often also report on ecological outcomes (e.g. Aswani & Weiant 2004; Needles et al 2013; Kainamu‐Murchie et al 2018), increasing the evidence base of these linkages. Additionally, the most studied ecological interventions (species translocation and artificial reef construction) have successfully improved the most common ecological outcomes of species abundance, size, and health (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Even articles describing social outcomes of ecological interventions will often also report on ecological outcomes (e.g. Aswani & Weiant 2004; Needles et al 2013; Kainamu‐Murchie et al 2018), increasing the evidence base of these linkages. Additionally, the most studied ecological interventions (species translocation and artificial reef construction) have successfully improved the most common ecological outcomes of species abundance, size, and health (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The tool is not perfect; issues have been identified in terms of an over-emphasis on pressurestate interactions, with inadequate treatment or integration of management responses and impacts to human well-being (Lewison et al, 2016;Patrício et al, 2016), but it does help to identify where pressures and threats are in a system, and therefore possible options for intervention. In Aotearoa NZ, ki uta ki tai-from mountain to sea-is a Māori concept that emphasises the interconnectedness of ecosystems inclusive of people (Schiel and Howard-Williams, 2016;Tipa et al, 2016;Kainamu-Murchie et al, 2018). This concept aligns closely with the commitment to EBM required to effectively manage cumulative effects in complex marine systems.…”
Section: Linking Across Scales -The Role Of Metaphors and Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The increasingly powerful position of Māori/Iwi can provide unique opportunities to explore alternative approaches to CE management. For example, a ki uta ki tai (mountains to sea) approach to CE management that draws from traditional and contemporary Māori approaches to natural resource management (Kainamu-Murchie et al, 2018) provides a proactive, holistic framing from which CE management can be undertaken.…”
Section: Solutions Availablementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ki uta ki tai (from mountain to the sea) is a philosophy that reflects the Ngāi Tahu view of environmental and resource management and acknowledges both the biophysical connectivity and the reciprocal relationship between people and the environment (Te Rünanga o Ngāi Tahu 2003. Kainamu-Murchie et al (2018) used a survey approach to identify how local estuarine users have been effected by anthropogenic impacts and exclusion from decision-making processes. They identified that the environmental indices commonly utilised by survey participants were similar to global estuarine stressors, e.g.…”
Section: Fostering Kaitiakitangamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Much of the research in this special issue has been assisted in part by the VM policy shaping the allocation of government research funding (e.g. Hepi et al 2018;Kainamu-Murchie et al 2018;Kitson et al 2018;Kusabs et al 2018;Ogilvie et al 2018;Whaanga et al 2018). However, despite the majority of national science programmes now containing research driven by VM policy and over 140 VM Capability Fund projects being granted between 2013 and 2018 (https://www.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%