Stewardship of local wetlands: environmental ethics and traditional ecological knowledge in four rural Newfoundland communities

Environmental ethics is the study of the values and attitudes that guide the way we behave towards nature. Such studies are critical to addressing environmental and natural resource problems because value judgements are decisive when formulating decisions regarding the natural environment, whether b...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hollis, T. I.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/10675/
https://research.library.mun.ca/10675/1/Hollis_TI.pdf
Description
Summary:Environmental ethics is the study of the values and attitudes that guide the way we behave towards nature. Such studies are critical to addressing environmental and natural resource problems because value judgements are decisive when formulating decisions regarding the natural environment, whether by an individual or at policy-making level. This thesis is an exploratory study of environmental ethics, and local and centralized natural resource decision-making, in four rural Newfoundland communities. It examines the values associated with, attitudes towards, and uses of local wetlands in the context of a culture that has relied upon, and to varying degrees continues to rely on, local raw resources. In order to investigate the role that values assume in policy-making, a community level wetlands' stewardship programme, initiated from government level in two of the four study communities, is examined. This programme is also used as a case study of ethics in participatory community management. -- This thesis adopts the culturalist view of the construct of people-human relations by focusing on how peoples' valuations of the natural environment are affected by the way they engage with nature through their activities in it. The broad range of values in local wetlands that are held by community members, and which bear significantly on decision-making stances, are predominantly connected to the uses people make of their local wetlands. The tradition of, and modern hunter-gatherer use of the local environs may foster an awareness of the connection between humans and the natural environment, and develop a stewardship ethic based on both anthropocentric concerns to protect natural resources for future use, and also a moral concern for nature. Promoting appreciative uses and values of the natural environment may be effective for an increasingly detached-from-nature society but can lead to a separation from, and a privileging of specific aspects of nature. It can also foster a form of ethical elitism that can marginalise, and ...