This paper is about globalisation, the state, and community development in Melanesia. The paper draws on the concept of “weak state–strong society” and explores the influence of the Christian churches, non-government organisations, and kastom in shaping development and social change in a Melanesian society. The paper takes Solomon Islands as its focus and a case study is made of the North New Georgia Sustainable Social Forestry and Rural Development Project – a re-afforestation program established on the island of New Georgia in the late 1990s. Through this case study, the emergence of a locally-derived and locally-based approach to community and resource development is examined. Since the eighteenth century, the fortunes, practices, oppor...
As an anthropological historian rather than a political scientist, my understanding of the construct...
In this paper I will examine how logging in Papua New Guinea affects the relationship between the st...
The Solomon Islands villagers like so many of their Pacific island cousins have become preoccupied w...
This paper is about globalisation, the state, and community development and social change in Melanes...
Cultural and social relations that are constitutive of alternative ways of conceiving and practicing...
This work develops an historically substantiated anthropological thesis about non-state local govern...
For many outsiders, the accelerating failure of governments in western Melanesia in the last decade ...
'Social development' and 'economic development' are complex concepts, concepts that may be interpret...
Development in Papua New Guinea ... is research into village level issues of logging. In New Britain...
"This paper is written from a development perspective placing good or democratic governance at the h...
Abstract In the 1970s, the British Solomon Islands Protectorate introduced large scale plantati...
Economic development is usually considered to be increasing levels of output per capita and in the p...
That Solomon Islands village communities find their governments to be distant and invisible is not a...
Expatriate and multinational businessmen and companies have, over the last hundred years, drasticall...
While the community was discarded by early social theorists as an antiquated modernity-retarding soc...
As an anthropological historian rather than a political scientist, my understanding of the construct...
In this paper I will examine how logging in Papua New Guinea affects the relationship between the st...
The Solomon Islands villagers like so many of their Pacific island cousins have become preoccupied w...
This paper is about globalisation, the state, and community development and social change in Melanes...
Cultural and social relations that are constitutive of alternative ways of conceiving and practicing...
This work develops an historically substantiated anthropological thesis about non-state local govern...
For many outsiders, the accelerating failure of governments in western Melanesia in the last decade ...
'Social development' and 'economic development' are complex concepts, concepts that may be interpret...
Development in Papua New Guinea ... is research into village level issues of logging. In New Britain...
"This paper is written from a development perspective placing good or democratic governance at the h...
Abstract In the 1970s, the British Solomon Islands Protectorate introduced large scale plantati...
Economic development is usually considered to be increasing levels of output per capita and in the p...
That Solomon Islands village communities find their governments to be distant and invisible is not a...
Expatriate and multinational businessmen and companies have, over the last hundred years, drasticall...
While the community was discarded by early social theorists as an antiquated modernity-retarding soc...
As an anthropological historian rather than a political scientist, my understanding of the construct...
In this paper I will examine how logging in Papua New Guinea affects the relationship between the st...
The Solomon Islands villagers like so many of their Pacific island cousins have become preoccupied w...