106 research outputs found
Marine Resources Management in the Context of Customary Tenure
Although customary marine tenure (CMT) systems for the management of local marine resources occur throughout the world, compared with other models of fisheries management they remain relatively little known. The Pacific Basin is especially rich in CMT systems, which play key roles in overall social, economic and cultural life of societies. Based on a Solomon Island example, we examine the organizational principles and potentials of CMT systems to provide sustainable yields and equitable access to resources, their resilience to external pressures, and mechanisms for ensuring local autonomy in resource control. Next we demonstrate that CMT systems are an expression of traditional ecological knowledge, and show the importance of such knowledge to scientific research and the planning of resource management. Finally, we suggest priorities for research on CMT systems.community-based management, fisheries management, traditional environmental knowledge, traditional conservation, Pacific Basin, Solomon Islands, Environmental Economics and Policy, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
The rural context of giant clam mariculture in Solomon Islands: an anthropological study
Highlights the traditional importance of giant clams, and how participatory farming research can best be carried out within the islands' culture.Clam culture, Marine aquaculture, Small scale aquaculture, Rural development, Sociological aspects, Aquaculture development, Popular participation, Tenure, Solomon Islands, Tridacna, Hippopus
Traditional institutions and their role in the contemporary coastal resource management in the Pacific Islands
A discussion is presented on the role played by customary marine tenure (CMT) institutions in the regulation of fisheries in the Pacific Ocean Islands. Particular reference is made to the system in operation in Marovo Lagoon, in the Solomon Islands, whereby a number of defined clans control resource use within defined areas of land and sea. It is believed that such systems have considerable capacity for handling and adapting to new circumstances, thereby becoming potentially important tools in the contemporary management of fisheries and of the coastal zone in general
The Kiloparsec Scale Influence of the AGN in NGC 1068 with SALT RSS Fabry-P\'erot Spectroscopy
We present Fabry-P\'erot (FP) imaging and longslit spectroscopy of the nearby
Seyfert II galaxy NGC 1068 using the Robert Stobie Spectrograph (RSS) on the
Southern African Large Telescope (SALT) to observe the impact of the central
Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) on the ionized gas in the galaxy on kiloparsec
scales. With SALT RSS FP we are able to observe the H+[N II] emission
line complex over a 2.6 arcmin field of view. Combined with the
longslit observation, we demonstrate the efficacy of FP spectroscopy for
studying nearby Type II Seyfert galaxies and investigate the kiloparsec-scale
ionized gas in NGC 1068. We confirm the results of previous work from the
TYPHOON/Progressive Integral Step Method (PrISM) survey that the
kiloparsec-scale ionized features in NGC 1068 are driven by AGN
photoionization. We analyze the spatial variation of the AGN intensity to put
forward an explanation for the shape and structure of the kiloparsec-scale
ionization features. Using a toy model, we suggest the ionization features may
be understood as a light-echo from a burst of enhanced AGN activity 2000
years in the past.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astronomical
Journa
Spatially Extended Low Ionization Emission Regions (LIERs) at
We present spatially resolved emission diagnostics for eight
galaxies that demonstrate extended low ionization emission-line regions (LIERs)
over kpc scales. Eight candidates are selected based on their spatial extent
and emission line fluxes from slitless spectroscopic observations with the
HST/WFC3 G141 and G800L grisms in the well-studied GOODS survey fields. Five of
the candidates (62.5%) are matched to X-ray counterparts in the \textit{Chandra
X-Ray Observatory} Deep Fields. We modify the traditional
Baldwin-Philips-Terlevich (BPT) emission line diagnostic diagram to use
[SII]/(H+[NII]) instead of [NII]/H to overcome the blending of
[NII] and H+[NII] in the low resolution slitless grism spectra. We
construct emission line ratio maps and place the individual pixels in the
modified BPT. The extended LINER-like emission present in all of our
candidates, coupled with X-Ray properties consistent with star-forming galaxies
and weak [OIII]5007\AA\ detections, is inconsistent with purely
nuclear sources (LINERs) driven by active galactic nuclei. While recent
ground-based integral field unit spectroscopic surveys have revealed
significant evidence for diffuse LINER-like emission in galaxies within the
local universe , this work provides the first evidence for the
non-AGN origin of LINER-like emission out to high redshifts.Comment: 11 pages, 1 table, 6 figures, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysics Journal (ApJ
Landesque capital as an alternative to food storage in Melanesia: Irrigated taro terraces in New Georgia, Solomon Islands
In the Pacific islands, subsistence diversity made possible continuous production of food while welldeveloped exchange networks redistributed these foodstuffs as well as items within the prestige economy. All these were aspects of the ‘storage structures’ that enabled social and nutritional value to be saved, accumulated and later mobilised. In addition, there were investments in the land, landesque capital, which secured future food surpluses and so provided an alternative to food storage, in a region where the staple foods were mostly perishable, yams excepted, and food preservation was difficult. Landesque capital included such long-term improvements to productivity as terraces, mounds, irrigation channels, drainage ditches, soil structural changes and tree planting. These investments provided an effective alternative to food storage and made possible surplus production for exchange purposes. As an example, in the New Georgia group of the western Solomon Islands irrigated terraces, termed ruta, were constructed for growing the root crop taro (Colocasia esculenta). Surplus taro from ruta enabled inland groups to participate in regional exchange networks and so obtain the shell valuables that were produced by coastal groups. In this paper, we reconstruct how this exchange system worked in New Georgia using ethno-archaeological evidence, we chart its prehistoric rise and post-colonial fall, and we outline the factors that constrained its long-term expansion.Our gratitude for support during earlier fieldwork in the New Georgia group has already been expressed in previous publications. The 2014 project was supported by the Smuts Fund and Foreign Travel Fund, University of Cambridge, and by St John’s College, Cambridge.This is the accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Maney at http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/1749631414Y.000000004
Niabara - the Western Solomon Islands War Canoe at the British Museum
This paper describes the 3D digital documentation of a highly significant cultural heritage object from the Melanesian Southwest Pacific, held in the ethnographic collections of the British Museum. The object, which dates from about 1910, is a large plank-built war canoe from the island of Vella Lavella in New Georgia, Solomon Islands. 3D laser scanning is paired with anthropological research, which aims to deliver a holistic virtual 3D reconstruction and multimedia interactive delivery of the boat for the digital repatriation to the source community
Local and global interactions in an evolutionary resource game
Conditions for the emergence of cooperation in a spatial common-pool resource game are studied. This combines in a unique way local and global interactions. A fixed number of harvesters are located on a spatial grid. Harvesters choose among three strategies: defection, cooperation, and enforcement. Individual payoffs are affected by both global factors, namely, aggregate harvest and resource stock level, and local factors, such as the imposition of sanctions on neighbors by enforcers. The evolution of strategies in the population is driven by social learning through imitation, based on local interaction or locally available information. Numerous types of equilibria exist in these settings. An important new finding is that clusters of cooperators and enforcers can survive among large groups of defectors. We discuss how the results contrast with the non-spatial, but otherwise similar, game of Sethi and Somanathan (American Economic Review 86(4):766–789, 1996)
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