This is a call for applications for full-time research scholarships for two PhD students to engage in anthropological study on the topic of marine inequality. The successful candidates will undertake a doctoral thesis as part of ASAA/NZ Chairperson Dr. Fiona McCormack’s Royal Society of New Zealand’s Marsden Grant-funded project entitled “Marine inequality and environmental demise: Identifying imperial borders in ocean governance”.
Situated at the intersection of marine anthropology and critical anti-colonial studies, the project employs a comparative ethnographic framework to investigate four case studies – marine aquaculture in Aotearoa, the aquarium fishery in Hawai’i, and the wild, angler and farmed salmon fisheries in Iceland and Ireland. More broadly, drawing on the concept of ‘border imperialism’, the research investigates how marine regimes and economies travelled via the complex machinations of European worldviews, to re-imagine and re-direct localised relations to fish. That is, how does marine governance include or exclude local and Indigenous marine culture? What transnational attributes shape contemporary ocean governance?
As well as contributing to the broader Marsden Grant-funded study, PhD students are encouraged to develop their thesis topic on any aspect of the overall project. Thesis research could revolve around, for eg., marine governance, Indigenous claims, marine culture, revitalisation of Indigenous marine practices or marine livelihoods and environmental demise. It is expected that PhD projects will focus on one of the 4 research sites.
For more information about the scholarship, eligibility criteria, who to contact with questions, and how to apply, visit https://www.waikato.ac.nz/research/phd-opportunities/vacancies/marine-inequality