2024-03-28T17:18:00Z
https://u-ryukyu.repo.nii.ac.jp/oai
oai:u-ryukyu.repo.nii.ac.jp:02007818
2022-10-31T03:47:59Z
1642837622505:1642837679557:1642837680369
1642838403551:1642838412624
【《UH・UR合同シシポジウム》報告】Non-natives Need to Strive to be Non-invasive : Restoring Kalo and Community in He‘eia, Hawai‘i
Aikau, Hokulani K.
Since 2009, Kāko‘o 'Ōiwi, a non-profit organization, has been actively restoring kalo (taro) cultivation in the He‘eia ahupua‘a, on the windward coast of O‘ahu, on a parcel of land designated as wetland. There are various obstacles to the restoration process which include but are not limited to property rights, conservation policy at the state and federal levels, as well as the challenges and logistics of removing invasive species so that kalo can be replanted and regenerate. The removal of invasive plants are a key component of the restoration project and provides a metaphor for the need to remove the various settler state structures, such as private property, conservation strategies, and Federal policy related to First Nations and Native Americans and Native Hawaiians, that have inundated Indigenous ecosystems and in many cases pushing out the Native structures that once thrived in these environments. In this paper, I draw upon interviews, participant observation, surveys with community volunteers to explore (1) the challenges the community faces as they work to restore Indigenous land based practices associated with kalo; (2) the role stories play in the restoration pro b cess; (3) how gender matters in the restoration process.
紀要論文
http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501
琉球大学国際沖縄研究所
International Institute for Okinawan Studies
2013-03-29
VoR
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12000/30116
2186-7933
AA1256967X
国際琉球沖縄論集
International Review of Ryukyuan and Okinawan Studies
2
35
27
eng
open access