This rich ethnography analyzes coastal protection as a sociomaterial
practice. Coastal protection, Friederike Gesing argues, co-produces
natural and cultural orders. In the context of the Aotearoa New Zealand
coast, the book follows the emergence of a new sociotechnical imaginary:
coastal management working "with nature" - and not against it. Analysis
of a seawall controversy and different coastal protection projects shows
how "soft" protection slowly takes hold. Dune restoration volunteers,
coastal management experts, surfer-scientists, and Maori
conservationists engage in different practices of making coastal
nature-cultures: dune restoration as do-it-yourself erosion control,
reconstructing native nature, or soft engineering in concert with
natural processes.