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Stemming the colonial environmental tide - Shared Māori governance jurisdiction and ecosystem-based management over the marine and coastal seascape in Aotearoa New Zealand – Possible ways forward
Abstract
Ecosystem-based management (EBM) has become an appropriate international response for addressing the alarming global environmental degradation. EBM is designed and executed as an adaptive, learning-based process that applies the following common international principles:
• the connections and relationships within an ecosystem;
• the cumulative impacts that affect marine welfare;
• focus on maintaining the natural structure and function of ecosystems and their productivity;
• incorporate human use and values of ecosystems in managing the resources;
• recognise that ecosystems are dynamic and constantly changing;
• are based on a shared vision of all key participants; and
• are based on scientific knowledge, adopted by continual learning and monitoring.
The New Zealand Sustainable Seas National Science Challenge agrees with the above EBM principles and has adopted them but has also adapted them to an Aotearoa New Zealand context that fundamentally acknowledges mātauranga and tikanga Māori law and shared co-governance and concurrent jurisdiction hence the following Aotearoa New Zealand EBM principles:
• a co-governance and co-design structure that recognises the Māori constitutional relationship and mana whenua at all levels (whānau, hapū, iwi), together with the guiding principles of mauri, whakapapa, kaitiakitanga, mātauranga-a-iwi and mātauranga-a-hapū;
• is place and time-specific, recognising/understanding the ecosystem as a whole in all its ecological complexities and connectedness and addressing cumulative and multiple stressors;
• acknowledges humans as ecosystem components with multiple values;
• views long-term sustainability as a fundamental value, in particular maintaining values and uses for future generations;
• includes collaborative and participatory management throughout the whole process, considering all values and involving all interested parties from agencies and iwi to industries, whānau, hapū and local communities;
• has clear goals and objectives based on knowledge; and
• includes adaptive management, appropriate monitoring and acknowledgement of uncertainty.
This report focuses on analysing EBM through the incorporation of mātauranga and tikanga Māori and shared concurrent jurisdiction through Treaty of Waitangi partnerships over the marine and coastal environment.
Type
Report
Type of thesis
Series
Citation
Joseph, R., Rakena, M., Te Kuini Jones, M., Takuira, J., Te Tai, M., & Rakena, C. (2020). Stemming the colonial environmental tide - Shared Māori governance jurisdiction and ecosystem-based management over the marine and coastal seascape in Aotearoa New Zealand – Possible ways forward. Waikato Print. https://www.sustainableseaschallenge.co.nz/tools-and-resources/stemming-the-colonial-environmental-tide-final-report/
Date
2020-06-09
Publisher
University of Waikato