The Commonwealth Local Government Forum (CLGF) Pacific Project works with local government and other stakeholders in nine Pacific Island countries – Cook Islands, Fiji Islands, Kiribati, Samoa, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu. It seeks to strengthen local democracy and good governance, and to help local governments deal with the increasing challenges of service delivery and urban management in the unique Pacific environment.Human settlement patterns in the region are changing rapidly. The Pacific has traditionally been a rural agricultural/subsistence society, but this is no longer the case. The accelerated pace of urbanisation has impacted significantly on Pacific nations and in the very near future the majorit...
The Pacific Islands are rapidly becoming more urbanised, with the mounting pressures on infrastruct...
When the South Pacific Forum held its first meeting in 1971 only seven member states participated – ...
This article explores the contribution that local government to local government partnerships can ma...
The origins of the Commonwealth Local Government Forum’s Pacific Project date to a 1997 roundtable i...
In this paper we seek to answer some basic questions about the condition of local government in the ...
Solomon Islands is a chain of 922 islands in the South Pacific, spread over 1,450kms from Bougainvil...
Throughout the Pacific islands, urban planning and management remain largely neglected. A few Pacifi...
In 2007 the CEO of the then Noosa Council became aware of the Commonwealth Local Government Forum’s ...
"From this paper three main themes emerge: the importance of peri-urban areas, the emergence of conf...
The Commonwealth Local Government Forum (CLGF) was established in 1994, coinciding with rapid moves ...
The Pacific Islands region is rapidly urbanising with mounting social and ecological pressures, as h...
Throughout Melanesia and many parts of the Pacific, systems of government continue to be reviewed an...
In November 2011, the Polynesian Leaders Group (PLG) was formed. The inclusion of Samoa, Tonga and F...
For five decades, Pacific Island countries have used regionalism as a main vehicle to promote develo...
As a region, the nations of the Pacific face continuing challenges to their economic, political, soc...
The Pacific Islands are rapidly becoming more urbanised, with the mounting pressures on infrastruct...
When the South Pacific Forum held its first meeting in 1971 only seven member states participated – ...
This article explores the contribution that local government to local government partnerships can ma...
The origins of the Commonwealth Local Government Forum’s Pacific Project date to a 1997 roundtable i...
In this paper we seek to answer some basic questions about the condition of local government in the ...
Solomon Islands is a chain of 922 islands in the South Pacific, spread over 1,450kms from Bougainvil...
Throughout the Pacific islands, urban planning and management remain largely neglected. A few Pacifi...
In 2007 the CEO of the then Noosa Council became aware of the Commonwealth Local Government Forum’s ...
"From this paper three main themes emerge: the importance of peri-urban areas, the emergence of conf...
The Commonwealth Local Government Forum (CLGF) was established in 1994, coinciding with rapid moves ...
The Pacific Islands region is rapidly urbanising with mounting social and ecological pressures, as h...
Throughout Melanesia and many parts of the Pacific, systems of government continue to be reviewed an...
In November 2011, the Polynesian Leaders Group (PLG) was formed. The inclusion of Samoa, Tonga and F...
For five decades, Pacific Island countries have used regionalism as a main vehicle to promote develo...
As a region, the nations of the Pacific face continuing challenges to their economic, political, soc...
The Pacific Islands are rapidly becoming more urbanised, with the mounting pressures on infrastruct...
When the South Pacific Forum held its first meeting in 1971 only seven member states participated – ...
This article explores the contribution that local government to local government partnerships can ma...