Publications

Submitted, In Review and In Press

Vaughan, M.B. (2019). E wili i ka lei aloha ʻāina:  Wili Lei as research approach.  Moʻokūʻauhau, Sailing Into the Future, Guided By the Past. In N. Wilson-Hokowhitu, Indigenous Research Methodologies. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, In review.

Published, Refereed

Iwane, M., Leong, K., Vaughan, M., & Oleson, K. (2021). When a Shark Is More Than a Shark: A Sociopolitical Problem-Solving Approach to Fisher-Shark Interactions. Frontiers in Conservation Science, 2 (10). DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fcosc.2021.669105

Vaughan, M., Montgomery, M., Luebbe, K. (2020). Waiʻaleʻale. In N. Goodyear-Kaʻōpua, Craig Howes, Jonathan Kay Kamakawiwoʻole Osorio, & Aiko Yamashiro (Ed.), The Value of Hawaiʻi III: Hulihia, the Turning. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaiʻi Press, 185-198.

Montgomery, M., & Vaughan, M. (2020). Kīpuka Kuleana: Restoring Reciprocity to Coastal Land Tenure and Resource Use in Hawaiʻi. In N. Turner (Ed.), Plants, People and Places: the Roles of Ethnobotany and Ethnoecology in Indigenous Peoples’ Land Rights in Canada and Beyond. Kingston, Ontario, Canada: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 96, 238.

Diver, S., Vaughan, M., Baker-Médard, M., & Lukacs, H. (2019). Recognizing “reciprocal relations” to restore community access to land and water. International Journal of the Commons, 13(1), 400–429. DOI: http://doi.org/10.18352/ijc.881.

Vaughan, M., Kinney, B., Fu, K., Cadiz, E., Peralto, N., Kagawa, A., Muratsachi, J., Koethe, F., Geslani Scarton, C., & Farrant, K. (2019). Kahaleʻala, Haleleʻa: The Fragrant, Joyful, Welcoming House, A Visit to “Anini.” In Hokulani Aikau and Vernadette Gonzalez (Eds.), Detours: A Decolonial Guidebook to Hawaiʻi. Duke University Press.

Vaughan, M. (2019). Holoholo: Sharing Catch in Hawaiʻi. In C. Gupta (Ed.), Nourish: The Revitalization of Foodways in Hawaiʻi. First Edition. San Francisco, CA: Extracurricular Press. 

Ayers, A.L., Kittinger, J.N., and Vaughan, M.B. (2018). Whose right to manage? Distribution of property rights affects equity and power dynamics in comanagement. Ecology and Society, 23(2).

Delevaux J.M.S., Winter, K.B., Jupiter, S., Vaughan, M.B., Stamoulis, K.A., Bremer, L.L., Burnett, K., Garrod, P., Troller, J.L., and Ticktin, T. (2018). Linking land and sea through collaborative research to inform contemporary applications of Traditional Resource Management in Hawai‘i. Sustainability, 10, 3147.

Mamaril, M., Cox, L., and Vaughan, M.B. (2018). Weaving Evaluation into the Waipā Ecosystem: Placing Evaluation in an Indigenous Place-Based Education Program. Studies in Educational Evaluation56, 42-51.

Montgomery, M., and Vaughan, M.B. (2018). Ma Kahana ka ‘Ike: Lessons for Community-based Fisheries Management. Sustainability, 10, 3799. 

Sato, A,  M. Price., and Vaughan, M.B. (2018). Kāhuli: Uncovering Indigenous Ecological Knowledge to Conserve Endangered Hawaiian Land Snails.  Society and Natural Resources31(3), 320-334.

Vaughan, M.B. (2018). Kaiāulu: Gathering Tides. Oregon State University Press.

Winter, K.B., Beamer, K., Vaughan, M.B., Friedlander, A.M., Kido, M.H., Whitehead, A.N., Akutagawa, M.K.H., Kurashima, N., Lucas, M.P., and Nyberg, B. (2018). The Moku System: Managing Biocultural Resources for Abundance within Social-Ecological Regions in Hawai‘i Sustainability, 10, 3554.

Ayers, A.L., Kittinger, J.N., Imperial, M., and Vaughan, M.B. (2017). Making the transition to co-management governance arrangements in Hawai‘i: a framework for understanding transaction and transformation costs. International Journal of the Commons, 11(1), 388-421.

Pascua, P., McMillen, H., Ticktin, T., Vaughan, M.B., and Winter, K.B. (2017). Beyond Services: A Process and Framework to Incorporate Cultural, Genealogical, Place-based, and Indigenous Relationships in Ecosystem Service Assessments. Ecosystem Services, 26(2017), 465-475.

Vaughan, M.B., & Ayers, A.L. (2016). Customary Access: Sustaining Local Control of Fishing and Food on Kaua‘i’s North Shore. Food, Culture & Society19(3), 517-538.

Vaughan, M.B., Thompson, B., and Ayers, A.L. (2016). Pāwehe Ke Kai a ‘o Hā‘ena: Creating State Law based on Customary Indigenous Norms of Coastal Management. Society & Natural Resources, 30(1), 31-46.

Vaughan, M.B. (2015). “He Lei Aloha ʻĀina,” In R.K.N. Oliveira and E.K. Wright (Eds.), Kanaka ʻŌiwi Methodologies: Moʻolelo and Metaphor (pp. 42-52). Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press.

Vaughan, M.B., and Caldwell, M. (2015). “Hana Paʻa: Challenges and Lessons for Early Phases of Co-management.” Marine Policy, 62(2015), 1-62.

Vaughan, M.B. (2014).  ‘Āina (Land), That Which Feeds: Researching Community Based Natural Resource Management at Home.  Giving Back, A Special Issue of The Journal of Research Practice.  Editors Alice Kelly and Clare Gupta, 10(2), Article N19.

Vaughan, M.B. (2014).  “He Alo a he Alo:  Talking Story with Aunty Puanani Burgess.” In Noelani Goodyear Kaʻōpua, Kahunawai Wright and Ikaika Hussey (Eds.), A Nation Rising: Hawaiian Movements for Life, Land and Sovereignty (pp. 355-361). Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Vaughan, M.B., and Ardoin, N. (2014). The implications of differing tourist/resident perceptions for community-based resource management: a Hawaiian coastal resource area study, Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 22(1), 50-68.

Vaughan, M.B., and Vitousek, P. (2013) “Māhele: Sustaining Communities Through Small-Scale Inshore Fishery Catch and Sharing Networks.”  Pacific Science, 67(3), 329-344.

Published, Non-Refereed

Vaughan, M.B., and Ayers, A.L. (2016). “Here’s How To Do Sound Marine Management.” Honolulu Civil Beat, August 12.

Vaughan, M.B.  (2012).  “Waipouli” and “Kaulana Wale ka Ua o Hanalei.”  HOʻOLAULEʻA:  Celebrating Ten Years of Pacific Writing, Pacific Writerʻs Connection.

Vaughan, M.B.  (2010).  “Haʻawina,” “Hāʻupu,” and “E Hoʻi i ka Piko.” ʻŌIWI,  A Native Hawaiian Journal, Volume IV.

Shillinglaw, B., P. Morgan and M. Vaughan.  (2007)  “Financing Community-Based Conservation of Working Land.”  Conservation Finance Alliance.

Theses

Dissertation:  “Holoholo i ke Kai o Hialaʻa:  Lessons for Collaborative Ahupuaʻa Based Management of Coastal Resources from Hāʻena, Kauaʻi” (2013).

Master’s Thesis:  “Mai Uka a i Kai, ʻĀina Based Education in the ʻAhupuaʻa of Waipā” (2003).

Bachelor’s Thesis:  “ʻIke Aʻo: Transforming Education for Hawaiian Students:  An Examination of Waiʻanae High School Hawaiian Studies Center” (1998).