dc.description.abstract |
The issue of effective ocean management practices has assumed a centre stage
of national debate in such contemporary times because of its impact on coastal
communities and the nation as a whole. Indigenous Knowledge in ocean
management has played the role of ensuring the usage of useful practices in
managing the oceans. This study explores the forms of ocean-related-
Indigenous Knowledge and the patterns of ocean- related-Indigenous
Knowledge transfer in the Western Region of Ghana, its relevance in
managing the ocean effectively and the seemingly impediments to the
promotion of ocean related IK in coastal communities in modern times. By the
use of qualitative approach, a total number of 17 focus group discussions and
7 key-informant interviews were conducted. The study employed the
Diffusion of Innovation theory by Everett Rogers and Woodley‘s Ecological
Knowledge theory and used thematic analysis and phenomenological analytic
strategy as the analytic techniques. Among other findings, the participants
revealed that ocean-related indigenous knowledge like observance of nofishing
holidays, serving of food to the gods in the sea for bumper harvest, and
customary laws against the harvest of specific fishes in the sea in Axim helped
in preserving the sea and its environs sometime past. However, the nonapplication
of indigenous knowledge in recent times has led to the
deterioration of the sea surroundings and its resources in Axim. The findings
also revealed that there was a huge gap between the knowledge on ocean
related IK and practice as a result of the heavy presence of religion and
modernization. The paper argues that indigenous knowledge has a way of
enhancing the deployment of useful practices in managing the oceans;
nonetheless, pragmatic measures like the formation of intergenerational
learning programs or clubs and the encouragement of apprenticeship between
younger and older members of the community need to be considered to ensure
IK‘s continuous application and enforcement among natives in the coastal
communities and its successful transfer to the youthful generation. |
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