Winner of the 2014 Albert Corey Prize from the American Historical Association
Winner of the 2013 Hal Rothman Award from the Western History Association
Winner of the 2013 John Lyman Book Award in the Naval and Maritime Science and Technology category from the North American Society for Oceanic History
For centuries, borders have been central to salmon management customs on the Salish Sea, but how those borders were drawn has had very different effects on the Northwest salmon fishery. Native peoples who fished the Salish Sea--which includes Puget Sound in Washington State, the Strait of Georgia in British Columbia, and the Strait of Juan de Fuca--drew social and cultural borders around salmon fishing locations and found ways to administer the resource in a sustainable way. Nineteenth-century Euro-Americans, who drew the Anglo-American border along the forty-ninth parallel, took a very different approach and ignored the salmon's patterns and life cycle. As the canned salmon industry grew and more people moved into the region, class and ethnic relations changed. Soon illegal fishing, broken contracts, and fish piracy were endemic--conditions that contributed to rampant overfishing, social tensions, and international mistrust. The Nature of Borders is about the ecological effects of imposing cultural and political borders on this critical West Coast salmon fishery.
This transnational history provides an understanding of the modern Pacific salmon crisis and is particularly instructive as salmon conservation practices increasingly approximate those of the pre-contact Native past. The Nature of Borders reorients borderlands studies toward the Canada-U.S. border and also provides a new view of how borders influenced fishing practices and related management efforts over time.
Watch the book trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ffLPgtCYHA&feature=channel_video_title
Acknowledgments Pacific Borders: An Introduction 1. Native Borders 2. Fish, Fur, and Faith 3. Remaking Native Space 4. Fishing the Line: Border Bandits and Labor Unrest 5. Pirates of the Salish Sea 6. Policing the Border 7. Conclusion: The Future of Salish Sea Salmon Abbreviations Notes Bibliography
Lissa K. Wadewitz is assistant professor of history and environmental studies at Linfield College in McMinniville, Oregon.
Reviews for The Nature of Borders: Salmon, Boundaries, and Bandits on the Salish Sea
Wadewitz identifies an important environmental historical problem--how people make and challenge boundaries--and situates her investigation in a rich and complex case. It would be hard to imagine a site better suited to a transnational investigation in environmental history than the Salish Sea. Matthew Evenden, author of Fish versus Power: An Environmental History of the Fraser River An excellent and timely examination of how humans have organized ecological and social space across time, and of the implications of boundary making processes on people and nature alike. Joseph E. Taylor III, author of Making Salmon: An Environmental History of the Northwest Fishery Crisis
- Winner of Hal K. Rothman Award, Western History Association 2013 (United States)