Skip to main content
SLU publication database (SLUpub)

Research article2021Peer reviewed

The story of Wananalua: Stranded whales and contested marine sovereignties in Hawai'i

Ritts, Max; Wiebe, Sarah M.

Abstract

This paper considers how systems of interspecies knowing and care in Hawai'i push against state-supported frameworks of liberal biopolitical governance. In 2015, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) issued a citation two Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) women under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, for unlawfully "tak[ing] and/or or transporting" a stranded melon-headed whale ("Wananalua"). In the lawsuit, prosecutors deliberated on the legality of the traditional sea burial situating it within a broader context of cultural accommodations granted by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. From our examination of the lawsuit, we develop the argument that marine mammal care operates in HawaiModified Letter Turned Commai as a regulatory device for ordering interspecies relations and for pacifying Indigenous demands for greater marine political authority. To combine these claims, we consider the relation between two governance logics: liberal "recognition," wherein accommodations regarding culture are extended to previously disenfranchised social groups, and biopolitics, pertaining in the present case to care practices governing more-than-human actors and environments. Our arguments are supported by detailed case files and interviews with local informants, including the Kanaka women accused of mishandling Wananalua. The "ruptures" marking the Wananalua case suggest a liberal recognition framework whose failures are connected to the biopolitics it embraces, but with an added detail: The present story reflects on how an interspecies biopolitics-an attempted management of Kanaka-whale care practices-structures strategies of liberal recognition.

Keywords

Animals; environmental governance; Indigenous politics; policy assemblage; political ecology

Published in

Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space
2021, volume: 4, number: 2, pages: 317-336
Publisher: SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC

SLU Authors

UKÄ Subject classification

Social Sciences Interdisciplinary
Political Science (Excluding Peace and Conflict Studies)
Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/2514848620901438

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/116242