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- Title
The Waikato River: Changing Properties of a Living Māori Ancestor.
- Authors
van Meijl, Toon
- Abstract
In Māori cosmology, rivers and other waterways are conceptualised as living ancestors, who have their own life force and spiritual strength. The special status of rivers in Māori society also explains why they are sometimes separated from other Māori claims to natural resources of which they were dispossessed in the 19th century. Until recently,Māori were often eager to contend that ownership of rivers is not their prime interest, but instead, they argued that they feel obliged and responsible to keep rivers fresh, clean, and flowing. This perspective, however, changed under the impact of a new government policy of selling shares in energy corporations that use freshwater and geothermal resources for energy production. In this paper, I provide an ethnohistorical account of the Waikato River and show how conceptions of this 'ancestral river'changed in the course of colonial and postcolonial history, more specifically in response to a recent shift in government policy. In 2008, a joint management agreement was signed between the government and Waikato Māori for a 'clean and healthy river', leaving the issue of 'ownership' undecided. Only two years later, however, Māori felt forced to claim ownership when the government moved to sell shares of power-generating energy companies located along the river, which effectively transformed their 'ancestor' into a property object.
- Subjects
WAIKATO River (N.Z.); MAORI (New Zealand people); WATER power; GEOTHERMAL resources; GOVERNMENT ownership; ELECTRIC power production; ENERGY industries
- Publication
Oceania, 2015, Vol 85, Issue 2, p219
- ISSN
0029-8077
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/ocea.5086