A paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Western Regional Science Association Monterey, CaliforniaThe typical sovereign island economy is small and remote. For example the remote island nations of Nauru, Niue, and Saint Helena have populations in the range of 10 thousand each. Of course not all island nations are small or remote and neither are small or remote economies necessarily islands. However it is useful to think about the economies of small and remote islands because they can help us to understand the economic structure and prospects of larger and less remote places. Island economies generally lack a comparative advantage in the production of goods or services for export to the rest of the world. This is due to distance fro...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/In an earlier issue of Pacifi...
Presented at the Western Regional Science Association Annual Meeting Kauai, HawaiiAlaska has enjo...
Small island developing states (SIDS) are vulnerable due to their small size in both biophysical and...
Statewide descriptions of the Alaska economy are dominated by the much larger urban areas and cannot...
As pointed out in this article, small island economies are diverse in their nature and in the challe...
This dissertation investigates small remote island economies (SRIEs)—a unique grouping of countries ...
Alaska’s geography—its location, climate, topography, and resources—have driven Alaska’s economy in ...
Small remote island economies are known to face a number of economic challenges, particularly, in t...
The many difficult development problems faced by small resource-poor island countries such as those ...
Home to more than 50 million people, small island nations differ significantly in terms of size, soc...
The Small Island Developing States (SIDS)1 in the Pacific, spread out over an area of 30 million squ...
Since the end of the commercial fur seal hunt in 1984, the economy of the Pribilof Islands, Alaska, ...
The small island economies of the South Pacific share several basic problem due to their size and is...
Purpose– This study aims to investigate growth differentials among small islands and the impact of t...
This publication is part of the Understanding Alaska (UA) project, which is a special series of rese...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/In an earlier issue of Pacifi...
Presented at the Western Regional Science Association Annual Meeting Kauai, HawaiiAlaska has enjo...
Small island developing states (SIDS) are vulnerable due to their small size in both biophysical and...
Statewide descriptions of the Alaska economy are dominated by the much larger urban areas and cannot...
As pointed out in this article, small island economies are diverse in their nature and in the challe...
This dissertation investigates small remote island economies (SRIEs)—a unique grouping of countries ...
Alaska’s geography—its location, climate, topography, and resources—have driven Alaska’s economy in ...
Small remote island economies are known to face a number of economic challenges, particularly, in t...
The many difficult development problems faced by small resource-poor island countries such as those ...
Home to more than 50 million people, small island nations differ significantly in terms of size, soc...
The Small Island Developing States (SIDS)1 in the Pacific, spread out over an area of 30 million squ...
Since the end of the commercial fur seal hunt in 1984, the economy of the Pribilof Islands, Alaska, ...
The small island economies of the South Pacific share several basic problem due to their size and is...
Purpose– This study aims to investigate growth differentials among small islands and the impact of t...
This publication is part of the Understanding Alaska (UA) project, which is a special series of rese...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/In an earlier issue of Pacifi...
Presented at the Western Regional Science Association Annual Meeting Kauai, HawaiiAlaska has enjo...
Small island developing states (SIDS) are vulnerable due to their small size in both biophysical and...