"Fiji’s army-backed interim regime is an organisation of indigenous Fijian power that paradoxically has been forged against supposed threats to the military and the multi-ethnic nation from Fijian ethnic extremism. It starkly highlights the importance of distinguishing between potentially accommodative institutional expressions of Fijian power and excluding Fijian nationalism. This difference is a feature of Fiji’s political development that can be traced back over many decades to the times of Apolosi Nawai and Ratu Lala Sukuna. This paper examines episodes in the trajectory of Fijian power from those times to the present ..." - page 1AusAI
Since attaining independence from Britain in 1970, Fiji enjoyed a period of ‘multiracial peace’ for ...
The indigenous Fijian conviction of entitlement to political power was encouraged by their privilege...
Fiji became independent in 1970, and functioned for 17 years under a constitution with democratic el...
The present regime in Fiji can be understood, in part, as the ‘will to power’ of a military strength...
Fiji’s December 2006 military coup and the abrogation of the country’s Constitution in April 2009 ha...
This Discussion Paper provides an account of the rise and fall of chiefly leadership and the apparen...
Fiji went to the polls in late May 1992, five years after the coups of 1987, and two years after the...
Fiji has been buffeted by three waves of external influences that profoundly reconfigured its demogr...
Historians of politics in colonial Fiji highlight the contrast between Indian leaders' challenge to ...
In recent years there have been some dramatic changes of political leadership in the Asia-Pacific r...
The prestige of the Fijian community in independent Fiji should surprise those who have been intro...
The process of Fiji’s recent constitutional reform highlighted the dilemma of reconciling a principl...
"Much of the commentary on Fiji’s coup of December 2006, particularly that sympathetic to Commodore ...
Fiji’s history is interspersed with ethnic conflict, military coups, new constitutions and democrati...
Fiji’s history is interspersed with ethnic conflict, military coups, new constitutions and democrati...
Since attaining independence from Britain in 1970, Fiji enjoyed a period of ‘multiracial peace’ for ...
The indigenous Fijian conviction of entitlement to political power was encouraged by their privilege...
Fiji became independent in 1970, and functioned for 17 years under a constitution with democratic el...
The present regime in Fiji can be understood, in part, as the ‘will to power’ of a military strength...
Fiji’s December 2006 military coup and the abrogation of the country’s Constitution in April 2009 ha...
This Discussion Paper provides an account of the rise and fall of chiefly leadership and the apparen...
Fiji went to the polls in late May 1992, five years after the coups of 1987, and two years after the...
Fiji has been buffeted by three waves of external influences that profoundly reconfigured its demogr...
Historians of politics in colonial Fiji highlight the contrast between Indian leaders' challenge to ...
In recent years there have been some dramatic changes of political leadership in the Asia-Pacific r...
The prestige of the Fijian community in independent Fiji should surprise those who have been intro...
The process of Fiji’s recent constitutional reform highlighted the dilemma of reconciling a principl...
"Much of the commentary on Fiji’s coup of December 2006, particularly that sympathetic to Commodore ...
Fiji’s history is interspersed with ethnic conflict, military coups, new constitutions and democrati...
Fiji’s history is interspersed with ethnic conflict, military coups, new constitutions and democrati...
Since attaining independence from Britain in 1970, Fiji enjoyed a period of ‘multiracial peace’ for ...
The indigenous Fijian conviction of entitlement to political power was encouraged by their privilege...
Fiji became independent in 1970, and functioned for 17 years under a constitution with democratic el...