M.A. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2014.Includes bibliographical references.This thesis examines the self-identification of university-age urban Papua New Guineans and their role in nation-building. I question the role of the state and civil society in nation-building and the ideal of the nation-state model for the diverse Melanesian region. I focus on the implications of social change and social identities in urban Papua New Guinea (PNG) through globalization and migration flows from the rural to the urban. I argue that the influences of modernity and urban social change, particularly being away from customary land ties, lead to a self-identification among the urban youth towards a regional identity and a national imagery, highlighting the...
This paper explores, from a postcolonial perspective, research which investigated the ambivalent pos...
The main aim of this writing is to analyze the formation of an identity conducted by students of Pap...
This thesis examines how indigenous Papua New Guinean notions of identity and belonging are embodied...
Nation-building and the tasks of encouraging a sense of national identity and political community po...
Nation-building and the tasks of encouraging a sense of national identity and political community po...
This paper was presented in the panel 'Pacific nations? Understanding attitudes to national identity...
The decades since independence have seen substantial changes in Papua New Guinea’s cultures, economi...
This study reveals that the state has exerted politics of homogenization upon the Papuans. The Papu...
The challenges of nation building in Melanesia and Timor-Leste have often been neglected in the regi...
The challenges of nation building in Melanesia and Timor-Leste have often been neglected in the regi...
This article explores the issue of split nationalism among Papuan young generation. This research wa...
Nation-building remains a key challenge across south-west Pacific societies, including Solomon Islan...
There are probably no other people on earth to whom the image of the ‘stone-age ’ is so persistently...
This book examines the attitudes of tertiary students in Melanesia and Timor-Leste to national ident...
Peles is a Melanesian concept related to the grounding of a person's Indigenous origin in a particul...
This paper explores, from a postcolonial perspective, research which investigated the ambivalent pos...
The main aim of this writing is to analyze the formation of an identity conducted by students of Pap...
This thesis examines how indigenous Papua New Guinean notions of identity and belonging are embodied...
Nation-building and the tasks of encouraging a sense of national identity and political community po...
Nation-building and the tasks of encouraging a sense of national identity and political community po...
This paper was presented in the panel 'Pacific nations? Understanding attitudes to national identity...
The decades since independence have seen substantial changes in Papua New Guinea’s cultures, economi...
This study reveals that the state has exerted politics of homogenization upon the Papuans. The Papu...
The challenges of nation building in Melanesia and Timor-Leste have often been neglected in the regi...
The challenges of nation building in Melanesia and Timor-Leste have often been neglected in the regi...
This article explores the issue of split nationalism among Papuan young generation. This research wa...
Nation-building remains a key challenge across south-west Pacific societies, including Solomon Islan...
There are probably no other people on earth to whom the image of the ‘stone-age ’ is so persistently...
This book examines the attitudes of tertiary students in Melanesia and Timor-Leste to national ident...
Peles is a Melanesian concept related to the grounding of a person's Indigenous origin in a particul...
This paper explores, from a postcolonial perspective, research which investigated the ambivalent pos...
The main aim of this writing is to analyze the formation of an identity conducted by students of Pap...
This thesis examines how indigenous Papua New Guinean notions of identity and belonging are embodied...