Nauru: Phosphate and Political Progress is the story of David and Goliath in a modern political setting in the South Seas. Controlled, protected, or occupied successively by Germans, Australians, British, and Japanese and then again by Australians under U.N. Trusteeship, all (except Germany) for the purpose of exploiting the island{u2019}s one resource - phosphate - Nauru is one of the smallest and most isolated islands in the Pacific, with a mere 3000 inhabitants. The struggle the Nauruans waged against Australia was not only for political independence but, more important, the right to control the phosphate industry for the benefit of the Nauruans. Their victory will encourage dependent minorities throughout the world. This book is a timel...
This book is inspired by the University of the South Pacific, the leading institution of higher educ...
Nauru's current financial crisis is a direct result of its own mishandling of its mineral wealth. Na...
This is an important book. It is a reprint of the first detailed study of how Pacific Islanders resp...
Nauru is a very small, very isolated island with a small indigenous population, yet in 1963 it was ...
Nauru the small Pacific Coral island lying just sourh of the equator, has supplied high-grade phosph...
Conference paper for the Cultural Encounters in the Pacific War conference, sponsored by the East-We...
In the 1950s, Australia, the United Kingdom and New Zealand were forced to consider the long term fu...
Although the general thrust of strategies to achieve sustainable development is focused on the caref...
This dissertation draws on fifteen months of fieldwork between Geneva, Australia, Fiji, and the Repu...
When the South Pacific Forum held its first meeting in 1971 only seven member states participated – ...
IN 2007, THE PARLIAMENT OF NAURU, a (formerly) phosphorus-rich island nation located in the southwes...
Securing Village Life: Development in Late Colonial Papua New Guinea examines the significance for p...
This paper explains the connection between colonialism, environmental destruction, capitalism, and d...
International perceptions of the Pacific Island nation of Nauru are dominated by two interrelated st...
Tulagi was the capital of the British Solomon Islands Protectorate between 1897 and 1942. The Britis...
This book is inspired by the University of the South Pacific, the leading institution of higher educ...
Nauru's current financial crisis is a direct result of its own mishandling of its mineral wealth. Na...
This is an important book. It is a reprint of the first detailed study of how Pacific Islanders resp...
Nauru is a very small, very isolated island with a small indigenous population, yet in 1963 it was ...
Nauru the small Pacific Coral island lying just sourh of the equator, has supplied high-grade phosph...
Conference paper for the Cultural Encounters in the Pacific War conference, sponsored by the East-We...
In the 1950s, Australia, the United Kingdom and New Zealand were forced to consider the long term fu...
Although the general thrust of strategies to achieve sustainable development is focused on the caref...
This dissertation draws on fifteen months of fieldwork between Geneva, Australia, Fiji, and the Repu...
When the South Pacific Forum held its first meeting in 1971 only seven member states participated – ...
IN 2007, THE PARLIAMENT OF NAURU, a (formerly) phosphorus-rich island nation located in the southwes...
Securing Village Life: Development in Late Colonial Papua New Guinea examines the significance for p...
This paper explains the connection between colonialism, environmental destruction, capitalism, and d...
International perceptions of the Pacific Island nation of Nauru are dominated by two interrelated st...
Tulagi was the capital of the British Solomon Islands Protectorate between 1897 and 1942. The Britis...
This book is inspired by the University of the South Pacific, the leading institution of higher educ...
Nauru's current financial crisis is a direct result of its own mishandling of its mineral wealth. Na...
This is an important book. It is a reprint of the first detailed study of how Pacific Islanders resp...