‘When you have no law you are nothing’: Cane toads, social consequences and management issues
- 1 December 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology
- Vol. 5 (3) , 205-225
- https://doi.org/10.1080/1444221042000299565
Abstract
In this article we demonstrate that Yanyuwa people have detailed biological knowledge of their northern Australian environment, which is culturally defined and embedded within their relationships to country, resources and each other. Through a case study of the impact of Bufo marinus (cane toads) on Yanyuwa culture and everyday life, we argue that Aboriginal management strategies and Aboriginal peoples’ intimate knowledge of species and environment need to be understood as both legitimate and fundamental when engaging in management initiatives in Australia. We demonstrate that for Yanyuwa people emotional engagement with their environment is underpinned by a morality of social and environmental relations and that ‘memory’ is pivotal to this engagement. We conclude by briefly delineating how the adoption of a ‘moral ecology’ perspective goes some way to addressing issues pertinent to discursive encounters at cultural management frontiers.Keywords
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