Inclusive hunting: examining Faroese whaling using the theory of socio-cultural viability
Whaling is a globally controversial topic, and Faroese drive-style whaling, grindadráp, is no exception. A complex common-pool resource (CPR) institution, viewable from multiple moral, social, economic and political viewpoints, grindadráp is a challenge to assess. Responding to calls to utilise more...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Maritime studies 2017-05, Vol.16 (1), p.1, Article 6 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Whaling is a globally controversial topic, and Faroese drive-style whaling,
grindadráp,
is no exception. A complex common-pool resource (CPR) institution, viewable from multiple moral, social, economic and political viewpoints,
grindadráp
is a challenge to assess. Responding to calls to utilise more relationship-centred and multi-perspectival approaches to studying CPRs, this article examines
grindadráp
utilising the
theory of socio-cultural viability
, which asserts diverse understandings of the world can be classified within a fourfold typology and that ‘successful’ institutions draw on all four
social solidarities
in dealing with challenges that arise. The analysis reveals how throughout
grindadráp’s
history its place in Faroese society has been maintained through the enforcement of a largely egalitarian conceptualisation. However, in meeting various challenges around the distribution of meat, sustainability and killing methods, the institution has accepted solutions utilising alternative conceptualisations. It is this adaptability which has allowed
grindadráp
to remain a popular part of Faroese society, even as dependence on pilot whale meat has declined. The issue of toxins in pilot whale meat is found to be arguably the greatest threat to
grindadráp
, undermining the egalitarian foundations of the practice, the response to which is something that Faroese society is currently in the process of negotiation. |
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ISSN: | 2212-9790 1872-7859 2212-9790 1872-7859 |
DOI: | 10.1186/s40152-017-0061-9 |