USP Theses Collection


Menu



A B C D E F G H I J-L M N O P Q-R S T U-V W-Y
close this section of the library Entrepreneurship -- Fiji -- Taveuni


View the PDF document Business Va'avanua : cultural hybridisation and indigenous entrepreneurship in the Bouma National Heritage Park, Fiji
Author: Farrelly, Trisia Angela
Institution: Massey University.
Award: Ph.D.
Subject: Ecotourism -- Social aspects -- Fiji -- Taveuni, Entrepreneurship -- Fiji -- Taveuni, Community development -- Fiji -- Taveuni, National parks and reserves -- Fiji -- Taveuni
Date: 2009.
Call No.: Pac G 155 .F5 F372 2009
BRN: 1194111
Copyright:Over 80% of this thesis may be copied without the authors written permission

Abstract: This thesis explores the ways community-based ecotourism development in the Boumā National Heritage Park was negotiated at the nexus of Western entrepreneurship and the vanua, an indigenous epistemology. In 1990, the Boumā tribe of Taveuni, Fiji established the Boumā National Heritage Park. A growing dependence on the market economy and a desire to find an economic alternative to commercial logging on their communally-tenured land, led to their decision to approach the New Zealand government for assistance to establish the Park. The four villages involved have since developed their own community-based ecotourism enterprises. Despite receiving first place in a British Airways Tourism for Tomorrow Award category in 2002, there was a growing sense of social dysfunction in Boumā during the research period. According to my participants, this was partly due to the community-based ecotourism development process which had paid little attention to the vanua. Largely through talanoa as discussion, the people of Boumā have become increasingly conscious of references to the vanua values in their own evaluation and management of the projects. This thesis draws on Tim Ingold’s (2000) ‘taskscapes’ as, like the vanua, they relationally link humans with other elements of the environment within their landscape. This contrasts with a common Western epistemological approach of treating humans as independent of other cosmological and physical elements and as positioned against the landscape. Largely due to its communal nature, it may be argued that the vanua is incompatible with values associated with Boumā’s Western, capitalist-based ecotourism models. However, in this thesis I argue that despite numerous obstacles, the Boumā National Heritage Park is one example of a tribe’s endeavours to culturally hybridise the vanua with entrepreneurship to create a locally meaningful form of indigenous entrepreneurship for the wellbeing of its people. The Boumā people call this hybrid ‘business va’avanua’. Informal talanoa is presented in this thesis as a potential tool for political agency in negotiating issues surrounding community-based ecotourism and business va’avanua. i
Disclaimer & Copyright l Contact Us l
© Copyright 1968 - 2018. All Rights Reserved.
USP Library
The University of the South Pacific
Laucala Campus, Suva, Fiji
Tel: +679 323 1000