<em>Pua ka Wiliwili, Nanahu ka Manō</em>: Understanding Sharks in Hawaiian Culture
Puniwai
Abstract
(guardians) and as unique individuals. By using manō as a lens through which to recognize the uniqueness of the Hawaiian worldview, the author highlights the classifijication system developed and applies this framework in analyzing management scenarios. She argues that using Hawaiian Indigenous science can help adapt new ways to classify our environmental interactions and relationships that will bring us closer to our living relatives. Management decisions regarding culturally important species need not be based solely on the most current Western scientifijic data but can utilize the much longer data set of knowledge stored in Kanaka Maoli oral literature.
Topics & Concepts
IndigenousTraditional knowledgeHistoryIndigenous cultureAnthropologyEnvironmental ethicsGenealogySociologyEthnologyEcologyBiologyPhilosophyMarine animal studies overviewIndigenous Studies and EcologyEnvironmental DNA in Biodiversity Studies