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Kaiāulu

Gathering Tides

Mehana Blaich Vaughan

puke

Ka Haku: Mehana Blaich Vaughan
Nā Kumuhana: Conservation of natural resources--Hawaii--Kauai. ; Conservation of natural resources. ; Hawaii--Kauai.
Ka Hōʻuluʻulu Manaʻo: "On the northeast coast of Kauaʻi, catch from small local reefs, and the sharing of this abundance, has sustained area kaiāulu (communities) for centuries, through tidal waves, hurricanes, burgeoning tourism, and influx of new residents, and loss of access to coastal lands, now private retreats for the ultra-wealthy. Building on interviews with more than sixty Hawaiian elders, leaders, and fisher men and fisher women, Kaiāulu shares their stories of enduring community efforts to cultivate fishing spots, maintain connection to family lands, reassert local governance rooted in ancestral values, and teach future generations to carry on. Kaiāulu is a skillfully written and deeply personal tribute to a community based not on ownership, but on reciprocity, responsibility, and caring for the places that shape and sustain us all"-- Page 4 of cover.

  • helu_kuhikuhi: 1323
  • inoa: Kaiāulu
  • hope_inoa: Gathering Tides
  • inoa_wae: Kaiāulu Gathering Tides
  • ʻōlelo_koʻikoʻi: Mehana Blaich Vaughan
  • hulu: puke
  • kumuhana: Conservation of natural resources--Hawaii--Kauai. |Conservation of natural resources. |Hawaii--Kauai.
  • haku: Mehana Blaich Vaughan
  • haku_wae: Vaughan, Mehana Blaich
  • hōʻuluʻulu_manaʻo: "On the northeast coast of Kauaʻi, catch from small local reefs, and the sharing of this abundance, has sustained area kaiāulu (communities) for centuries, through tidal waves, hurricanes, burgeoning tourism, and influx of new residents, and loss of access to coastal lands, now private retreats for the ultra-wealthy. Building on interviews with more than sixty Hawaiian elders, leaders, and fisher men and fisher women, Kaiāulu shares their stories of enduring community efforts to cultivate fishing spots, maintain connection to family lands, reassert local governance rooted in ancestral values, and teach future generations to carry on. Kaiāulu is a skillfully written and deeply personal tribute to a community based not on ownership, but on reciprocity, responsibility, and caring for the places that shape and sustain us all"-- Page 4 of cover.
  • papa_kuhikuhi: Prologue: He lei aloha (A lei of aloha) -- Chapter 1. ʻĀina: that which feeds -- Moʻolelo: ʻOhana (Family) -- Chapter 2. Hōʻihi: reciprocity and respect -- Moʻolelo: Minamina (To grieve for something lost) -- Moʻolelo: Kai palaoa (Whale sea) -- Chapter 3. Kahu: care and cultivation. -- Moʻolelo: Lawaiʻa (Fisherman) -- Moʻolelo: ʻŌulilani, a beloved elder -- Chapter 4. Konohiki: inviting community ability and abundance -- Moʻolelo: Hauakaʻi Koʻolau (A field trip in Koʻolau) -- Moʻolelo: Tūtū Makaleka Day -- Chapter 5. Kīpuka: kuleana to land -- Moʻolelo: Wāwā's legacy -- Moʻolelo: E alu pū (To come together) -- Chapter 6. Kiaʻi: carrying kuleana into governance -- Moʻolelo: Hālawai (Hāʻena public hearing) -- Chapter 7. Kaiāulu: provisioning community -- Epilogue: Kū kāhili (Standard bearers) -- Closing oli: Kiaʻiʻia Kīlauea e Nihokū.
  • lā: 2018

Edition Info

  • Kaiāulu

    . Oregon State University Press (Corvallis),
    isbn: 087071922X
    isbn: 9780870719226
    • helu_kuhikuhi: 330
    • helu_kuhikuhi_ʻiʻo: 1323
    • mea_paʻi: Oregon State University Press
    • wahi_paʻi: Corvallis
    • ana_ʻaoʻao: 250 pages
    • isbn: 087071922X
    • isbn_13: 9780870719226

    Holdings