Care, not incarceration: exploring the carcerality of fisheries enforcement and potential decolonial futures in Hawaiʻi

Current U.S. environmental management paradigms default to enforcement mechanisms that feed into the prison industrial complex, such as fines and jailing. To avoid contributing to and reinforcing mass incarceration and militarism, environmental management systems need to be transformed towards non-c...

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Main Author: Jonathan James Fisk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-04-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021010197
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spelling doaj-d4368d5b1fe04c46861df5b4859659322021-05-02T05:57:03ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402021-04-0174e06916Care, not incarceration: exploring the carcerality of fisheries enforcement and potential decolonial futures in HawaiʻiJonathan James Fisk0Corresponding author.; University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, 1910 East-West Road, Sherman Laboratory 101, Honolulu, HI 96822, United StatesCurrent U.S. environmental management paradigms default to enforcement mechanisms that feed into the prison industrial complex, such as fines and jailing. To avoid contributing to and reinforcing mass incarceration and militarism, environmental management systems need to be transformed towards non-carceral forms. Additionally, working towards Indigenous sovereignty and decolonization, requires the strengthening of Indigenous relations with and governance over the land under the respective paradigms of Indigenous communities. This paper uses Hawaiʻi state fisheries law and programmatic efforts to address a central question: What is the extent and nature of carceral norms within conventional environmental management systems and how do they affect management outcomes? The study examines the current fisheries enforcement scheme in Hawaiʻi, tracing the embedded logic of carcerality, the degree to which ultimate sources of harm are addressed, and the concentration of governing powers. The results highlight how current fisheries enforcement is insufficient in caring for the seascape and, through its carceral approach, contributes to social injustices, particularly for Kānaka Maoli (Native Hawaiians). Additionally, this paper demonstrates how current efforts in Hawaiʻi – Community-Based Subsistence Fisheries Areas (CBSFAs), the ʻAha Moku system, and the Makai Watch Program – attempt to empower communities, but ultimately keep enforcement powers centralized within the State, thus perpetuating dependency on the criminal justice system. This study ends with a discussion on how future decarceral environmental governance systems could be designed to center Hawaiian relations & paradigms, particularly by prioritizing the values of re-education, rematriation, and restoration.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021010197Fisheries managementDecolonizationHawaiiMass incarcerationEnvironmental justiceSocial-ecological systems
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jonathan James Fisk
spellingShingle Jonathan James Fisk
Care, not incarceration: exploring the carcerality of fisheries enforcement and potential decolonial futures in Hawaiʻi
Heliyon
Fisheries management
Decolonization
Hawaii
Mass incarceration
Environmental justice
Social-ecological systems
author_facet Jonathan James Fisk
author_sort Jonathan James Fisk
title Care, not incarceration: exploring the carcerality of fisheries enforcement and potential decolonial futures in Hawaiʻi
title_short Care, not incarceration: exploring the carcerality of fisheries enforcement and potential decolonial futures in Hawaiʻi
title_full Care, not incarceration: exploring the carcerality of fisheries enforcement and potential decolonial futures in Hawaiʻi
title_fullStr Care, not incarceration: exploring the carcerality of fisheries enforcement and potential decolonial futures in Hawaiʻi
title_full_unstemmed Care, not incarceration: exploring the carcerality of fisheries enforcement and potential decolonial futures in Hawaiʻi
title_sort care, not incarceration: exploring the carcerality of fisheries enforcement and potential decolonial futures in hawaiʻi
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Current U.S. environmental management paradigms default to enforcement mechanisms that feed into the prison industrial complex, such as fines and jailing. To avoid contributing to and reinforcing mass incarceration and militarism, environmental management systems need to be transformed towards non-carceral forms. Additionally, working towards Indigenous sovereignty and decolonization, requires the strengthening of Indigenous relations with and governance over the land under the respective paradigms of Indigenous communities. This paper uses Hawaiʻi state fisheries law and programmatic efforts to address a central question: What is the extent and nature of carceral norms within conventional environmental management systems and how do they affect management outcomes? The study examines the current fisheries enforcement scheme in Hawaiʻi, tracing the embedded logic of carcerality, the degree to which ultimate sources of harm are addressed, and the concentration of governing powers. The results highlight how current fisheries enforcement is insufficient in caring for the seascape and, through its carceral approach, contributes to social injustices, particularly for Kānaka Maoli (Native Hawaiians). Additionally, this paper demonstrates how current efforts in Hawaiʻi – Community-Based Subsistence Fisheries Areas (CBSFAs), the ʻAha Moku system, and the Makai Watch Program – attempt to empower communities, but ultimately keep enforcement powers centralized within the State, thus perpetuating dependency on the criminal justice system. This study ends with a discussion on how future decarceral environmental governance systems could be designed to center Hawaiian relations & paradigms, particularly by prioritizing the values of re-education, rematriation, and restoration.
topic Fisheries management
Decolonization
Hawaii
Mass incarceration
Environmental justice
Social-ecological systems
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021010197
work_keys_str_mv AT jonathanjamesfisk carenotincarcerationexploringthecarceralityoffisheriesenforcementandpotentialdecolonialfuturesinhawaiʻi
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