Reframing Indigenous water rights in ‘modern’ Taiwan: reflecting on Tayal experience of colonized common property

There is a widely accepted stereotype that Indigenous Taiwanese have lost their connection to country as a result of colonization and thus the Indigenous presence is often omitted in representations of ‘modern’ Taiwan. By asserting a modern/traditional binary that privileges the colonizer as modern...

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Main Authors: Yi-shiuan Chen, Sandra Suchet-Pearson, Richard Howitt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services) 2018-04-01
Series:International Journal of the Commons
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/823
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spelling doaj-ae1eb194fac44545a2c448914c23bd572020-11-25T03:27:51ZengUtrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services)International Journal of the Commons1875-02812018-04-0112137840110.18352/ijc.823370Reframing Indigenous water rights in ‘modern’ Taiwan: reflecting on Tayal experience of colonized common propertyYi-shiuan Chen0Sandra Suchet-Pearson1Richard Howitt2Macquarie UniversityMacquarie UniversityMacquarie UniversityThere is a widely accepted stereotype that Indigenous Taiwanese have lost their connection to country as a result of colonization and thus the Indigenous presence is often omitted in representations of ‘modern’ Taiwan. By asserting a modern/traditional binary that privileges the colonizer as modern these representations demean Indigenous cultures as ‘primitive’ or ‘traditional’. This paper challenges those biased dichotomies by exploring the experience of Tayal people in northern Taiwan, drawing on both field and archival research to demonstrate the resistant and persistent Indigenous presence in common property resource governance, specifically water governance. The research found that Tayal systems for common property governance persist in the management of water. It also demonstrates that in those governance systems, non-human agencies such as water have active agency in Tayal culture. By recognizing water as actively engaged in the common property governance, the paper argues that governing common property in the Tayal context is about contemporary and adaptive governance relations among non-human and human agencies in a more-than-human world, as well as communally sharing the custodianship. It is misguided to understand these governance systems as primitive, traditional or inauthentic – all common representations within dominant Taiwanese discourses. The paper also argues that recognizing and engaging Tayal people’s communal custodianship offers a foundation for building culturally appropriate, just and resilient common property governance frameworks in Taiwan’s contested cultural landscapes.https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/823common property resource governance, indigenous presence, customary water interest, taiwan, more-than-human
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yi-shiuan Chen
Sandra Suchet-Pearson
Richard Howitt
spellingShingle Yi-shiuan Chen
Sandra Suchet-Pearson
Richard Howitt
Reframing Indigenous water rights in ‘modern’ Taiwan: reflecting on Tayal experience of colonized common property
International Journal of the Commons
common property resource governance, indigenous presence, customary water interest, taiwan, more-than-human
author_facet Yi-shiuan Chen
Sandra Suchet-Pearson
Richard Howitt
author_sort Yi-shiuan Chen
title Reframing Indigenous water rights in ‘modern’ Taiwan: reflecting on Tayal experience of colonized common property
title_short Reframing Indigenous water rights in ‘modern’ Taiwan: reflecting on Tayal experience of colonized common property
title_full Reframing Indigenous water rights in ‘modern’ Taiwan: reflecting on Tayal experience of colonized common property
title_fullStr Reframing Indigenous water rights in ‘modern’ Taiwan: reflecting on Tayal experience of colonized common property
title_full_unstemmed Reframing Indigenous water rights in ‘modern’ Taiwan: reflecting on Tayal experience of colonized common property
title_sort reframing indigenous water rights in ‘modern’ taiwan: reflecting on tayal experience of colonized common property
publisher Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services)
series International Journal of the Commons
issn 1875-0281
publishDate 2018-04-01
description There is a widely accepted stereotype that Indigenous Taiwanese have lost their connection to country as a result of colonization and thus the Indigenous presence is often omitted in representations of ‘modern’ Taiwan. By asserting a modern/traditional binary that privileges the colonizer as modern these representations demean Indigenous cultures as ‘primitive’ or ‘traditional’. This paper challenges those biased dichotomies by exploring the experience of Tayal people in northern Taiwan, drawing on both field and archival research to demonstrate the resistant and persistent Indigenous presence in common property resource governance, specifically water governance. The research found that Tayal systems for common property governance persist in the management of water. It also demonstrates that in those governance systems, non-human agencies such as water have active agency in Tayal culture. By recognizing water as actively engaged in the common property governance, the paper argues that governing common property in the Tayal context is about contemporary and adaptive governance relations among non-human and human agencies in a more-than-human world, as well as communally sharing the custodianship. It is misguided to understand these governance systems as primitive, traditional or inauthentic – all common representations within dominant Taiwanese discourses. The paper also argues that recognizing and engaging Tayal people’s communal custodianship offers a foundation for building culturally appropriate, just and resilient common property governance frameworks in Taiwan’s contested cultural landscapes.
topic common property resource governance, indigenous presence, customary water interest, taiwan, more-than-human
url https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/823
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