At independence the three Melanesian states of the Pacific Islands region – Papua New Guinea (1975), Solomon Islands (1978) and Vanuatu (1980) – opted for decentralised systems of government. In all cases a three-tier system of national, provincial and local government was introduced, although the specific arrangements and allocation of powers differed substantially. Since that time there has been a good deal of analysis about the policy processes of decentralisation itself and about the effectiveness (or otherwise) of national-level governance in these countries; but until recently little has been written about the lower levels.This short article surveys some of the recent research and commentary on local-level governance relating particul...
In general, communities in Small Island Developing States (SIDS) are socioeconomically and environme...
The 1995 local-level government reforms undertaken in Papua New Guinea (PNG) were largely in respons...
There is a vast literature on the principles of public administration and good governance, and no sh...
Throughout Melanesia and many parts of the Pacific, systems of government continue to be reviewed an...
In this paper we seek to answer some basic questions about the condition of local government in the ...
"This paper is written from a development perspective placing good or democratic governance at the h...
In dealing with the question of a future system for governance in Solomon Islands, two options hav...
For over a decade the governments of Kiribati and Tuvalu have adopted decentralisation policies to s...
That Solomon Islands village communities find their governments to be distant and invisible is not a...
Over the past decade, RAMSI has stabilized the state in Solomon Islands, but many basic problems of ...
One of the great difficulties of contemporary political analysis is that one continually faces the p...
The arguments for decentralisation are broadly about economic efficiency and enhancing democratic pr...
Papua New Guinea (PNG) has over 800 different language groups. Decentralisation in PNG continues to ...
The central objective of this thesis is to understand the challenges of local governance after the e...
There is a vast literature on the principles of public administration and good governance, and no sh...
In general, communities in Small Island Developing States (SIDS) are socioeconomically and environme...
The 1995 local-level government reforms undertaken in Papua New Guinea (PNG) were largely in respons...
There is a vast literature on the principles of public administration and good governance, and no sh...
Throughout Melanesia and many parts of the Pacific, systems of government continue to be reviewed an...
In this paper we seek to answer some basic questions about the condition of local government in the ...
"This paper is written from a development perspective placing good or democratic governance at the h...
In dealing with the question of a future system for governance in Solomon Islands, two options hav...
For over a decade the governments of Kiribati and Tuvalu have adopted decentralisation policies to s...
That Solomon Islands village communities find their governments to be distant and invisible is not a...
Over the past decade, RAMSI has stabilized the state in Solomon Islands, but many basic problems of ...
One of the great difficulties of contemporary political analysis is that one continually faces the p...
The arguments for decentralisation are broadly about economic efficiency and enhancing democratic pr...
Papua New Guinea (PNG) has over 800 different language groups. Decentralisation in PNG continues to ...
The central objective of this thesis is to understand the challenges of local governance after the e...
There is a vast literature on the principles of public administration and good governance, and no sh...
In general, communities in Small Island Developing States (SIDS) are socioeconomically and environme...
The 1995 local-level government reforms undertaken in Papua New Guinea (PNG) were largely in respons...
There is a vast literature on the principles of public administration and good governance, and no sh...