This article discusses the largely forgotten anti-whaling protests in Norway and Japan at the beginning of the twentieth century. It shows that fishing communities around the world protested almost simultaneously against the introduction of Norwegian-style industrial whaling, even though the protesting fishermen did not compete for the same marine resources as the whalers. Analysing Norwegian and Japanese fishermen’s knowledge reveals that whales played a crucial part in pre-industrial coastal fishing, as they were partly responsible for bringing fish closer to the shore. The article argues that fishing communities around the world had developed ‘coeval moral ecologies’, believing that the killing and flensing of whales caused environmental...
abstract: Every season from September to March in Taiji, Japan, around 23,000 dolphins, and other sm...
A key question in any environmental dispute is the nature of what is under discussion. 'Cosmopolitic...
Despite enduring so much foreign criticism for its pro-whaling stance, why does Japan continue to pu...
From pre-historic to modern times, whales remain an exploitable resource, though in recent decades t...
This article examines the current dispute over whaling from the perspective of Japan, a country that...
This article posits the whaling debate in Japan as representing a conflict of environmental and huma...
After the whaling moratorium of the International Whaling Commission (IWC) came into force in 1986, ...
The contemporary whaling debate is one of the most complex and intractable issues of international e...
This paper examines how the Faroese and their pilot whaling practice, called grindadráp, is affected...
Today there is enormous popular interest in marine mammals. Western media tend to dwell on the ongoi...
This paper aims to clarify the modernization progress of whaling during the Meiji era in the Nagasak...
AbstractWhen the global moratorium on commercial whaling was implemented in 1986, Korea prohibited w...
This paper explores whaling and whale watching to determine the viability of their divergent practic...
When the global moratorium on commercial whaling was implemented in 1986, Korea prohibited whaling; ...
A perennial challenge in efforts to deal with environmental issues is the question of how to simplif...
abstract: Every season from September to March in Taiji, Japan, around 23,000 dolphins, and other sm...
A key question in any environmental dispute is the nature of what is under discussion. 'Cosmopolitic...
Despite enduring so much foreign criticism for its pro-whaling stance, why does Japan continue to pu...
From pre-historic to modern times, whales remain an exploitable resource, though in recent decades t...
This article examines the current dispute over whaling from the perspective of Japan, a country that...
This article posits the whaling debate in Japan as representing a conflict of environmental and huma...
After the whaling moratorium of the International Whaling Commission (IWC) came into force in 1986, ...
The contemporary whaling debate is one of the most complex and intractable issues of international e...
This paper examines how the Faroese and their pilot whaling practice, called grindadráp, is affected...
Today there is enormous popular interest in marine mammals. Western media tend to dwell on the ongoi...
This paper aims to clarify the modernization progress of whaling during the Meiji era in the Nagasak...
AbstractWhen the global moratorium on commercial whaling was implemented in 1986, Korea prohibited w...
This paper explores whaling and whale watching to determine the viability of their divergent practic...
When the global moratorium on commercial whaling was implemented in 1986, Korea prohibited whaling; ...
A perennial challenge in efforts to deal with environmental issues is the question of how to simplif...
abstract: Every season from September to March in Taiji, Japan, around 23,000 dolphins, and other sm...
A key question in any environmental dispute is the nature of what is under discussion. 'Cosmopolitic...
Despite enduring so much foreign criticism for its pro-whaling stance, why does Japan continue to pu...