4.6 Article

Re-Imagining Wild Rivers in Aotearoa New Zealand

Journal

LAND
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/land11081272

Keywords

socio-ecology; river management; matauranga Maori; space to move; re-wilding

Funding

  1. Marsden

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This article reviews perspectives on rivers in New Zealand, exploring whether they are wild or tamed entities. It argues that management practices have disconnected society from rivers, causing an environmental loss, particularly for indigenous Maori. The article suggests that reimagining wild rivers in New Zealand can be achieved by reconnecting with indigenous knowledge.
If wilderness is dead, do wild rivers exist and if so, in what form and in whose construction? This reflective article reviews perspectives on rivers in Aotearoa New Zealand as wild or tamed entities. A historical overview of the socio-cultural and institutional relationships with rivers examines the meanings of rivers in Aotearoa New Zealand through multiple lenses. This includes indigenous Maori knowledge, command-and-control mentalities of a settler society that assert human authority over rivers, the emergence of the environmental movement and associated legislation with a sustainability focus (the Resource Management Act), and recent movement towards co-governance arrangements that incorporate the original intent of Te Tiriti o Waitangi (1840). It is contended that management practices have disconnected society from rivers, and vice versa, creating a sense of environmental loss (solastalgia), especially for Maori. Using rivers in the Greater Wellington Region as examples, prospects to accommodate wild river behaviour in Aotearoa New Zealand are explored. Recognising that re-wilding is no longer a feasible option in most instances, further attempts to tame rivers are also considered to be unrealistic, especially in light of climate change and accentuated flood risk. Reconnecting with indigenous knowledge offers prospects to re-imagine wild rivers in Aotearoa, living generatively with rivers as dynamic and emergent entities.

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