dc.description.abstract | As new technologies are developed, the operations of extractive industries are
increasingly affecting indigenous peoples’ lands and natural resources. Thus, the
environment has become an essential element in conflicts involving companies,
governments and indigenous peoples. The main aim of this dissertation is to study,
mainly through discourse analysis, how these different actors construct a particular
concept of the environment to promote their interests. In concrete, the study focuses on
the company Petrobras, the Government of New Zealand and the Māori people. The
research is divided into two main sections. The first part consists of the analysis of the
different concepts of environment elaborated by the actors, and these concepts are
related to their particular interests. The second part analyses the specific case of
Petrobras’ offshore oil exploration in the Raukumara Basin, an operation that
encountered strong opposition from Māori communities and environmental groups.
From the analysis, two main conclusions are made. First, each actor shapes the concept
of environment for its own purposes, and they all use the Science knowledge discourse,
whose credibility is recognised worldwide. The Māori knowledge system is mainly used
by the Māori themselves to promote their right to self-determination, and sometimes by
the government in an attempt to establish a positive relationship with Māori. Two main
themes were found throughout all discourses, which are the consideration of the
environment as both part of each actor’s identity and a resource for economic growth.
All actors consider nature as an object which they can use at their will. The second main
conclusion is that the environment has become a relevant space for power-related
disputes. In the particular case of New Zealand, the conflict between the government
and Māori is related to the long-lasting dispute between the country’s sovereign rights
and the right of Māori to self-determination. | en |