This article posits the whaling debate in Japan as representing a conflict of environmental and human rights claims; specifically a struggle between animal preservation and cultural rights claims. The sustainable whaling that Japan advocates on human rights grounds is constructed by its critics as an abuse of the environment. Understanding the whaling debate as this form of conflict should help us to be more cognisant of the views of both sides and make us realise the difficulty in resolving the tensions within the whaling debate. I argue that, seen from this perspective, the Japanese do have a reasonable case in the whaling debate on the following grounds: conservation of whales is not really an issue; while Japanese claims to whale use as a "right" may be weak, the issue generally is politically fought between countries that historically have and have not used marine foods predominantly; Japan's sustainable approach to whaling under close International Whaling Commission (IWC) supervision might aid conservation better than if Japan was to leave IWC; and the case against whale use really relies on extreme NGO position that whales are comparable to humans and therefore should not be killed at all.
Funding
Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)
History
Volume
23
Issue
3
Start Page
42
End Page
43
Number of Pages
2
ISSN
0155-0306
Location
Brisbane
Publisher
Social Alternatives
Language
en-aus
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Open Access
No
External Author Affiliations
Faculty of Arts, Health and Sciences; TBA Research Institute;