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Hawaiian culture and modern community development. - Printable Version

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Hawaiian culture and modern community development. - Wao nahele kane - 10-11-2014

Has the Hawaiian culture influenced the development on its islands?
If so, please cite the influences and how they pay tribute to the Hawaiian culture.

Also For example; if we look at the roads about the islands do they reflect the Hawaiian culture? Obviously paved roadways are not a Hawaiian cultural development. Can the roads reflect the Hawaiian culture and if so how so and still serve their intend purposes? In other words, in what ways can modern community development reflect the Hawaiian culture as to honor it for future generations to feel it as they live within the community?




RE: Hawaiian culture and modern community development. - oink - 10-11-2014

What???

Pua`a
S. FL
Big Islander to be.


RE: Hawaiian culture and modern community development. - Wao nahele kane - 10-11-2014

http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/fy773

The Importance of Incorporating Local Culture into Community Development

This paper is part of a series of discussions on community development. This series includes specialized papers on civic engagement, community action, and other topics important to the development of community.

Introduction

Developmental trajectories of communities are usually explained by reference to economic history and trends, human capital deficits, and/or the local labor market structure. Local culture is rarely seen as playing a significant role in development outcomes. Nor does empirical research routinely consider the role of local culture in fostering a more complete understanding of community development. Instead, culture is often viewed as an outgrowth of a particular region and is dependent upon social and other experiences, rather than an independent force.

Such perspectives miss an important aspect of the community development process. The culture of a community significantly shapes debate and action that lead to development. Local culture also presents unique options for locally based economic, social, and other developments. Local understandings and interpretations of a community's history reflect past events that feed into and are partially driven by the demands, sentiments, and interests of those in the present. This makes it crucial for community development practitioners to consider the cultural importance of efforts to improve local well-being. By paying attention to and incorporating unique cultural values, traditions, value systems, and related factors, more efficient and effective development efforts can be achieved.

Local culture provides a sense of identity for communities and residents. This identity facilitates common understandings, traditions, and values that are all central to identifying plans of action to improve well-being. Culture contributes to building a sense of local identity and solidarity. It influences the confidence that communities have for coming together to address specific needs and problems. This local commitment among residents, regardless of economic or political conditions, can serve as a valuable tool in shaping the effectiveness of development options and local actions. Such commitment, based on culture and common identity, can be seen as a potentially important tool in sustaining local government, development, and social improvement efforts.

Providing a local linkage and cultural basis for development is important. People are likely to take part in and remain committed to development efforts to which they have a direct connection. Development efforts that consider or focus on cultural aspects of communities provide a mechanism for linking local residents to the development process. Through such efforts, local residents can encourage development that preserves or promotes their culture. This is particularly important in development efforts that seek to elicit local participation, philanthropy, volunteerism, and community action. In understanding the place of culture in the development process, consider the social basis of culture, its relationship to interaction, and the types of development and local actions it can contribute to.

Role of Local Culture

The concept of culture has many definitions and interpretations. In social settings, it is often used broadly to represent entire ways of life. Included in such ways of life are rules, values, and expected behaviors. At its most basic level, culture can be seen as the shared products of a society. These products have a common meaning that accumulates over time and also reflects shared attachments among community members.

Culture can be seen as consisting of ideas, beliefs, rules, and material dimensions. Ideas include things such as the values, knowledge, and experiences held by a culture. Values are shared ideas and beliefs about what is morally right or wrong, or what is culturally desirable. Such values are abstract concepts and are often based in religion or culture in that they reflect ideals and visions of what society should be. Such values often shape expected behavior and rules. These rules are accepted ways of doing things and represent guidelines for how people should conduct themselves and how they should act towards others.

Values and rules are often taken for granted and assumed to reflect a common understanding. Both, however, have direct origins and developed in response to conflicts or needs. At the core of such values and norms is a process of interaction that led to their emergence and acceptance. This process shapes the actions of individuals and social systems within their communities. Culture provides a sense of belonging and an arena in which residents can make a difference. At the same time, culture contributes to exclusionary practices and has been seen as an impediment to overall community development efforts. Regardless, it is clear that culture plays a critical role in local community action.

Applied Uses of Culture in Development

The inclusion of culture into community and economic development models can take many shapes and forms. Culture can serve as the central focus. Included would be tourism and other efforts that focus largely on the promotion, preservation, or enhancement of local or regional cultures. Culture can also be a factor that needs to be addressed to determine its impact on new or existing development programs, such as resource management or environmental protection. In facing development, the programs that communities are willing to accept and embrace are likely to depend largely on cultural factors. It is therefore vital that problems and potential solutions be defined in a manner consistent with the local culture.

Culture as a Focus of Development

Regional or local culture can serve as a basis for development. Such efforts can serve to promote the local identity, regional languages, and minority cultures. Efforts can focus on preservation or promotion of a culture, but they can also use culture to mobilize the local population. Examples of cultural preservation or efforts focusing solely on a culture are often seen in relation to tourism and conservation efforts. Included are renovation of villages (architectural rehabilitation), highlighting the architectural heritage of an area (restoring historic sites to serve as a focal point for tourists), cultural venues (local heritage centers and traditional cultural events), traditional craft and artistic skills (development of industry and employment based on producing crafts that symbolize local culture), and cultural-based entertainment and cultural dissemination (organization of cultural activities, festivals, and permanent exhibitions). Equally important is the environmental aspects of culture in which traditional uses of natural resources or events symbolize local cultural ties to environmental processes (solstice festivals, harvest festivals, and agriculture progress days).

These efforts serve as a basis for development, but they also serve to maintain cultural traditions and ways of life. Furthermore, such forms of development highlight the importance of rural cultures and identify their role in shaping wider society. Finally, through such development, community and cultural identities are reinforced and collective identities strengthened. Such interaction can lead to an improved state of community and social well-being.

Culture and Territorial Development

It is argued by some that development should focus clearly on specific sectors of the economy, while others argue that community development should be more tailored to the unique cultural characteristics of specific geographical areas and highlight their territorial elements. These sectored approaches have been central to most top-down or government-led development. However, sectored programs have received criticism, because such programs are often seen as being too broad in scope and in application to account for a community’s diversity and unique needs.

In response to such conditions, a shift from sectored to territorial community development policy has been suggested. In such policies, social cohesion and comprehensive planning have been included. Territorial approaches are best suited to meet the unique and complex conditions present in communities. The local culture is part of this later development model. As a result, increasing attention is being given to local level and bottom-up approaches that focus on culture, territory, local diversity, and optimizing local resources. Territorial approaches seek to enhance the particular strengths of a community by developing the potential of local resources such as individuals, businesses, and social groups. Such perspectives tend to include recognition of the total environment in which community development operates. Such methods attempt to address the interdependencies of people, the environment, and the communities within a locality. Enhancing or focusing on local culture serves this process.

Conclusion and Implications for Extension Programming

The perceptions of rural and urban areas, their economic bases, and means for their development will need to be more closely considered in future policy efforts. This is particularly true when considering the changing character of rural areas and the diversity of communities there. Local culture plays a central role in shaping community development, local character, and responses to needs. Continuing to ignore culture's critical role will constrain development efforts, rendering them little more than short-term solutions for endemic community issues and needs.

The relationship between culture and community development is vast. However, this important relationship is rarely given a significant role in the design of development efforts. Using an interactional approach to community development provides opportunities for incorporating insights into the role and place of culture. Furthermore, it means conceptualizing development to highlight the importance of establishing and enhancing social relationships. Aligning such development with cultural promotion and preservation can serve as a tool for successful development. Focusing on the erosion of solidarity or culture can also provide insight into the lack of progress or the presence of obstacles impeding existing development efforts.

Future decisions will need to be made about the types of development activities pursued. In this light, territorial perspectives that focus on local cultures and their attributes appear to provide a more comprehensive approach than those that focus on specialized economic sectors. Local culture is a fundamental component of community life that shapes its unique character, needs, and opportunities. Indeed, it differentiates communities, making one-size-fits-all policies and programs largely irrelevant.

Culture and cultural attachment can be used as a motivating factor in opposing anti-local-development activities, such as extra-local development and exploitation. Using culture to motivate community members can serve as a tool for policymakers and others interested in encouraging development at the local level.

Culture can be seen as presenting both the means and ends of development. To a great extent, it emphasizes the wealth and diversity of their cultural heritage, so communities will be able to develop activities that enhance social and economic well-being. Community development planners and practitioners need to understand and learn to capitalize on the strengths of community solidarity and culture.


RE: Hawaiian culture and modern community development. - oink - 10-11-2014

Too deep for me!

Pua`a
S. FL
Big Islander to be.


RE: Hawaiian culture and modern community development. - Wao nahele kane - 10-11-2014

I suppose this would serve as an example of where culturally based efforts should be focused within a community as opposed to simply protesting against telescope construction on a mountain top. In other words, if cultural preservation is truly ones goal, their efforts should focus on deeper issues, directions and standards within community development.


RE: Hawaiian culture and modern community development. - Carey - 10-11-2014

Iolani Palace...had electric lights and electricity installed prior to the installation of electricity in the US White House...it all depends on WHAT BASIS YOU USE to reflect back the culture...

as far as roadways, the Hawaiian influence in trail building is still very evident, and the fact that they built purposeful, landscape changing and long lasting trail improvements is a sign that that they were very intentional in their building and landscape changing...

The fields in the Kohalas that still show the ridged terracing even after a century or more further backs that the Hawaiian culture was a very progressive, landscape changing culture.

Of course, the prime landscape changing environments that most of us are very familiar with are the fishpond and Heiau constructions... these were massive projects undertaken with engineering and local labor market...most of the times utilizing a very formal feudal based social structure that placed a high percentage of the population in a subservient role...

So I am not totally getting what your point is, in reference to cultural construction.

Is your question, should we do all constructions utilizing local labor force in a totally subservient position that gives them little autonomy?... I am going to guess that most would not WANT to be the local labor force in a subservient position with little autonomy...


RE: Hawaiian culture and modern community development. - Wao nahele kane - 10-11-2014

Here's an example of such implimentation.

Would it be possible to establish an area on the Big Island where some Hawaiian people who elect to live a traditional Hawaiian lifestyle can go and establish such, with a chief that presides over that community etc? Perhaps the said community could adopt tourism visitation in a portion of the area where tourist and locals would get the real feel of what Hawaii was like during the time of Captain Cooks arrival with regard to Hawaiian lifestyle and dress etc. Modern medicine etc could still be made available but no electricity etc. allowed.

Financial support and material support could be provided through many avenues.

Something like this could be a desirable experience for not only some Hawaiians but also for outsiders. Even school children could be brought there for part of their education.

Would there be enough Hawaiians who would like to embark on such an endeavour?

It could prove to be a failed experiment in cultural preservation but it could prove to be very successful also.



RE: Hawaiian culture and modern community development. - Wao nahele kane - 10-11-2014

Anyone know the ownership and status of the Pa'akea area and the coastal regions North and South of it? I was under the impression it was Hawaiian homelands. True/false? That seems like a great area for such an endeavour but perhaps there are better locations.


RE: Hawaiian culture and modern community development. - Carey - 10-11-2014

There re no RESTRICTIONS to the plan you have outlined (as long as the feudal structure of tradition culture does not include some of those "little" things like forced labor and Kapus that include the death penalty....

DHHL and OHA have maps of their lands, and rules and regs about leaseholds (remember that there would be no commoner land ownership in your vision...all lands would be under the authority of the governing body...so state or fed leases should be OK..as long as the leaseholders comply with any use regulations...)
http://dhhl.hawaii.gov/
http://www.oha.org/page/trust-land-maps
http://dhhl.hawaii.gov/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Island_Plan_Hawaii_2002.pdf


RE: Hawaiian culture and modern community development. - james weatherford - 10-11-2014

Please bear with me while I try to know what I think by seeing what I say...

I am an islander by choice. Have learnt and am learning more of the Hawaiian language and the cultural implications of the same. Words, place, and values all come together in that language, as it does other languages. Is that "culture"?

"Hawaiian culture".
"Traditional Hawaiian culture".

The same?

Would that be "culture" frozen at some given point in time?
It would be my thought that any culture -- that of my own ancestors included, 'Native American'(Muscogee, a.k.a. Creek), Scot, French, Welsh... -- is not static. It changes over time. Culture is dynamic and evolutionary.
What "Hawaiian Culture" (or any culture) was 400 years ago, would not necessarily be the same as 800 or 1,200 years ago.

Certainly, one way to include any culture in to contemporary community planning is through place names.