Shark Fin City: transitional marine wildlife economies in Global Hong Kong

被引:0
作者
Rodenbiker, Jesse [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Princeton Univ, Ctr Contemporary China, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA
[2] Rutgers Univ New Brunswick, Dept Geog, 54 Joyce Kilmer Ave, Piscataway, NJ 08854 USA
关键词
Biodiversity; seafood; social value systems; urban wildlife markets; Hong Kong; URBAN;
D O I
10.1080/02723638.2024.2350099
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Hong Kong has historically been the epicenter of the global shark fin trade. Despite this legacy, recent public outreach campaigns highlighting the effects of consumption on marine ecosystems have precipitated shifts in the market. Fish maw and sea cucumber have emerged as substitutes in wildlife markets, marking an understudied phenomenon from urban geographical perspectives. This article investigates the transitional nature of social value systems underpinning Hong Kong's marine wildlife market through interviews with retailers, conservation organizations, and government officials, as well as visual surveys of market displays. Hong Kong's marine wildlife market, this article contends, brings into sharp relief how transitions in social value systems that substitute one type of non-fungible wildlife commodity for others can amplify biodiversity loss and reproduce expressions of social difference in urban space. The article illuminates how social value systems embedded in urban wildlife markets are related to human health, aging, gifting, and relationship building. Furthermore, it analyzes how the possession, consumption, and display of high-value wildlife commodities in cities reflects classed and gendered forms of social difference. The article further examines the challenges of regulating the market and shaping public values and actions in the face of escalating global biodiversity loss.
引用
收藏
页码:155 / 179
页数:25
相关论文
共 42 条
  • [21] The (Re) production of gendered positionality in botswana's commercial urban agriculture sector
    Hovorka, AJ
    [J]. ANNALS OF THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN GEOGRAPHERS, 2005, 95 (02) : 294 - 313
  • [22] Lee C. K., 2022, Hong Kong: Global Chinas restive frontier
  • [23] Lefebvre H., 1991, The Production of Space, DOI DOI 10.1027/1618-3169/A000129
  • [24] Animating caste: visceral geographies of pigs, caste, and violent nationalisms in Chennai city
    Narayanan, Yamini
    [J]. URBAN GEOGRAPHY, 2023, 44 (10) : 2185 - 2205
  • [25] Half a century of global decline in oceanic sharks and rays
    Pacoureau, Nathan
    Rigby, Cassandra L.
    Kyne, Peter M.
    Sherley, Richard B.
    Winker, Henning
    Carlson, John K.
    Fordham, Sonja V.
    Barreto, Rodrigo
    Fernando, Daniel
    Francis, Malcolm P.
    Jabado, Rima W.
    Herman, Katelyn B.
    Liu, Kwang-Ming
    Marshall, Andrea D.
    Pollom, Riley A.
    Romanov, Evgeny V.
    Simpfendorfer, Colin A.
    Yin, Jamie S.
    Kindsvater, Holly K.
    Dulvy, Nicholas K.
    [J]. NATURE, 2021, 589 (7843) : 567 - +
  • [26] Advancing One Health in Urban Seafood Markets: A Genetic and Social Analysis of Dried Sea Cucumber in Three New York City Chinatowns
    Rodenbiker, Jesse
    Therkildsen, Nina Overgaard
    Ruan, Erica
    Su, Kelly
    [J]. SUSTAINABILITY, 2024, 16 (09)
  • [27] Global shark fins in local contexts: multi-scalar dynamics between Hong Kong markets and Mid-Atlantic fisheries
    Rodenbiker, Jesse
    Therkildsen, Nina Overgaard
    Li, Cheong Chun
    [J]. ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY, 2023, 28 (03):
  • [28] Urban oceans: Social differentiation in the city and the sea
    Rodenbiker, Jesse
    [J]. ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING E-NATURE AND SPACE, 2023, 6 (01) : 412 - 432
  • [29] Animating the urban: between infrastructure and encounter
    Ruddick, Sue
    Bunce, Susannah
    Clancy, Cara
    Clement, Bronwyn
    Connors, John Patrick Casellas
    Fawcett, Leesa
    Gianotti, Anne Short
    Johnston, Jacquelyn J.
    Luther, Erin
    [J]. URBAN GEOGRAPHY, 2023, 44 (10) : 2063 - 2079
  • [30] Emerging from the murk: threats, challenges and opportunities for the global swim bladder trade
    Sadovy de Mitcheson, Yvonne
    To, Allen Wai-lun
    Wong, Nga Wing
    Kwan, Hiu Yin
    Bud, Wing Sum
    [J]. REVIEWS IN FISH BIOLOGY AND FISHERIES, 2019, 29 (04) : 809 - 835