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Restoration as reconnection: A relational approach to urban stream repair

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posted on 2024-04-07, 23:40 authored by L Samuelson, Brendon BlueBrendon Blue, Amanda ThomasAmanda Thomas
Urban stream environments have been significantly altered through processes of colonisation and urbanisation. In Te Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand, there is growing interest in peeling back layers of the city to reconnect with waterways. More-than-human geographies can play a critical role in contributing to these efforts, guiding understandings of what it means to restore and live alongside urban streams. In our case study of the Waimapihi Stream, we explore one community's ideas and practices of restoration and how they envision a thriving place through the notion of stream daylighting. The Waimapihi shows us that restoration activities are both product and process of co-creating an ontologically plural space for the renegotiation of what stream restoration means.

History

Preferred citation

Samuelson, L., Blue, B. & Thomas, A. (2023). Restoration as reconnection: A relational approach to urban stream repair. New Zealand Geographer, 79(2), 107-120. https://doi.org/10.1111/nzg.12372

Journal title

New Zealand Geographer

Volume

79

Issue

2

Publication date

2023-08-01

Pagination

107-120

Publisher

Wiley

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2023-07-19

ISSN

0028-8144

eISSN

1745-7939

Language

en