This article develops a new approach to the defence of necessity. Although the discussion is primarily situated in the context of the Pacific Island countries, it has relevance and application to criminal law theory more broadly and also to international criminal law. Working within the framework of the republican theory of criminal justice developed by Braithwaite and Pettit, it proposes two new codified defences: a defence of justified necessity judged according to an objective standard, and a defence of excused necessity judged according to a primarily subjective standard. It argues that each defence serves a different jurisprudential purpose, and that both are important in a fair and balanced criminal justice system. It also discusses t...