
Daniel Hikuroa
Related Authors
Hemopereki Simon
University of Waikato
Karly Christ
Victoria University of Wellington
Peter J Mellalieu
Unitec New Zealand
Anna Carr (ex Thompson/Thompson-Carr)
University of Otago
Luis Jiménez Cáceres
Universidad de Chile
Samuel W Rose
SUNY: University at Buffalo
Ula Piasta
Cornell University
Jana Javornik
University of East London
Gwen Robbins Schug
University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Gabriel Gutierrez-Alonso
University of Salamanca
Uploads
Papers by Daniel Hikuroa
In ‘Think like a Fish’ we draw attention to the seemingly invisible yet completely dominant terrestrial focus, and we suggest a reframing that centres the ocean. In this framing, Te Moana nui a Kiwa, the Pacific, is one expansive ocean, the great connector, in which the islands themselves were fish, moving through the water, mirrored above by the stars, which swam or sailed across the sky ocean.
With a shift away from Western hubris and human exceptionalism, the law of the sea might be rewritten to recognise an Oceanic vision, one in which the world’s great ocean has its own independent life, and its own right to be healthy and flourish. From there, it is but a short step to recognising the independent life and rights of the planet, and to put humanity in its proper place as one planetary life form, among many.
In ‘Think like a Fish’ we draw attention to the seemingly invisible yet completely dominant terrestrial focus, and we suggest a reframing that centres the ocean. In this framing, Te Moana nui a Kiwa, the Pacific, is one expansive ocean, the great connector, in which the islands themselves were fish, moving through the water, mirrored above by the stars, which swam or sailed across the sky ocean.
With a shift away from Western hubris and human exceptionalism, the law of the sea might be rewritten to recognise an Oceanic vision, one in which the world’s great ocean has its own independent life, and its own right to be healthy and flourish. From there, it is but a short step to recognising the independent life and rights of the planet, and to put humanity in its proper place as one planetary life form, among many.